johncassel wrote:
What is the difference between the Figure & Drawing tools?
The Drawing Tool does let you choose which page of a multipage PDF to place. The Figure Tool always places the first page.
The image placed with the Figure Tool is embedded into the project file. A drawing placed with the Drawing Tool can be linked to an external file and will thus update if the external file is updated.
A PDF placed with the Drawing Tool, is still a PDF - whether embedded or linked - and so if it is resized, all of the text and vector graphics scale absolutely cleanly.
A PDF placed with the Figure Tool is converted to a bitmap image at 300 (?) dpi. If you then stretch it, you get bad pixelization because just the converted bitmap version is being stretched. It is not like an Adobe "smart object" which would go back to the source PDF and re-convert to a bitmap at the new dimensions.
An image placed with the Figure Tool can be distorted. It will scale proportionally only if the shift key is held down while stretching. (An image placed with the Drawing Tool cannot be distorted.)
The distortion is very important, as I have found almost every received scanned PDF that I have dealt with is not scaled 100% correct in both axes. So, as I stretch the image to known measurements - I have to finish by distorting it along either the width or height to get the entire image to be to proper scale.
Images placed with the Figure Tool can be mirrored - those with the Drawing Tool cannot. If you are placing an image of a standard manufacturer detail (e.g.) - as long as there is no text involved, it is handy to mirror it if necessary to match the orientation in the model that you are calling it out from.
I find the info on pixel size in the Figure Tool useful
The Drawing Tool, however, has the ability to display a color image in grayscale which the Figure Tool cannot do. That could be useful, although I've not needed it with images.
I've noted many of these differences in the attached screenshot comparing the two dialogs.
And one last thing: Link was the first person that I recall noticed the Image Format pane's ability to re-save images in other file formats way back when. Kind of a strange feature to have there, but can by handy for people with no other software for such things. (Mac people have Preview which handles all of the available formats.) Since the Figure Tool will accept an image copied to the clipboard, you can marquee-copy anything in the 3D window, leave 3D and open the Figure Tool and click the Paste button, and the use the Save As to save the 'screenshot' in any format. Or use the Figure Tool to place it in a drawing with transparency. (You can make your own funky 3D-looking annotation symbols this way.) I don't know if anyone actually uses any of these particular features though!
It would of course be nice if these tools were combined into one.
Cheers,
Karl
One of the forum moderators
AC 28 USA and earlier • macOS Sequoia 15.2, MacBook Pro M2 Max 12CPU/30GPU cores, 32GB