Commas in Sheet Set Manager

by Donnie Gladfelter on January 31, 2008

in AutoCAD 2006,AutoCAD 2007,AutoCAD 2008,AutoCAD 2009

image

Sheet Set Manager has certainly made it much easier to create, manage, and plot drawing sheets.  Even still, SSM is not without it’s flaws.  Perhaps one of my all-time SSM annoyances is the fact you cannot insert a comma in a SSM field.  So how did I put a comma in the illustration above?

Well technically there is no comma in the above illustration.  Instead I have inserted a character that looks like a comma.  The secret is to press and hold the ALT key while you type 0130.  It will then insert a character that looks like a comma, but more importantly works with SSM.

The other question I get rather frequently is how to make a SSM field blank.  That solution is very similar to the comma solution.  Instead of typing ALT+0130, type ALT+0160.  The 0160 code will insert a non-breaking space, which will appear blank when plotted.

  • http://www.thecadgeek.com Donnie Gladfelter

    Huáscar – Thanks for sharing that additional tidbit of information!

  • http://thecadgeek.com/ Donnie Gladfelter

    Huáscar – Thanks for sharing that additional tidbit of information!

  • Huáscar Fernández

    Donnie,

    You can also have a non-breaking space by typing Shift-Ctrl-Space altogether.

  • Huáscar Fernández

    Donnie,

    You can also have a non-breaking space by typing Shift-Ctrl-Space altogether.

  • http://www.thecadgeek.com Donnie Gladfelter

    Joe – AutoCAD fonts (SHX) don’t always have the same depth as most True Type Fonts. The Alt + 0130 sequence was figured out by going to the Character Map in Windows. Seems to me the AutoCAD font you’re using just doesn’t have a comma character for 0130. Changing your font to a True Type Font (Arial, Times Roman, etc) should fix this for you. The only other option would be to open the Character Map in Windows, and see if you can find another character that looks like a comma, and try it. Sorry I don’t have a better answer for you.

    - Donnie

  • http://thecadgeek.com/ Donnie Gladfelter

    Joe – AutoCAD fonts (SHX) don’t always have the same depth as most True Type Fonts. The Alt + 0130 sequence was figured out by going to the Character Map in Windows. Seems to me the AutoCAD font you’re using just doesn’t have a comma character for 0130. Changing your font to a True Type Font (Arial, Times Roman, etc) should fix this for you. The only other option would be to open the Character Map in Windows, and see if you can find another character that looks like a comma, and try it. Sorry I don’t have a better answer for you.

    - Donnie

  • Joe Bouza

    Thanks for posting the escape sequence for SSM; The code for “Blanks” 0160 works great for me but Alt 0130 for a comma is giving me a headache. My SSM field is using Romand.shx, could this be my problem?

    Thanks Joe

  • Joe Bouza

    Thanks for posting the escape sequence for SSM; The code for “Blanks” 0160 works great for me but Alt 0130 for a comma is giving me a headache. My SSM field is using Romand.shx, could this be my problem?

    Thanks Joe

  • Richard Domke

    I don’t often get a chance to check in with your site (or the dozens of others I’ve bookmarked as “favorites”) but when I do, I enjoy what I find. I feel like the proverbial chipmunk scurrying around the forest floor gathering life-saving “nuggets of survival” for the inevitable times of need. Problem is, I’ve accumulated so many “caches of survival” (in various notebooks, filed under various titles and topics) that trying to find the specific one I need at any given time has become difficult and “time-inefficient” at best. Now I need a system of tracking. Oh well,…”My li’l Rosanne Rosanna Danna…it’s always sumpthin.”
    Keep up the great work!

  • Richard Domke

    I don’t often get a chance to check in with your site (or the dozens of others I’ve bookmarked as “favorites”) but when I do, I enjoy what I find. I feel like the proverbial chipmunk scurrying around the forest floor gathering life-saving “nuggets of survival” for the inevitable times of need. Problem is, I’ve accumulated so many “caches of survival” (in various notebooks, filed under various titles and topics) that trying to find the specific one I need at any given time has become difficult and “time-inefficient” at best. Now I need a system of tracking. Oh well,…”My li’l Rosanne Rosanna Danna…it’s always sumpthin.”
    Keep up the great work!

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