User Interface: Chapter Four
User Interface: Chapter Four
User Interface
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INTRODUCTION
To begin using MicroStation, you must first have an understanding of the basic functions in
MicroStation. This chapter covers the basic features of MicroStation’s user interface.
OVERVIEW
MOUSE FUNCTIONS
The mouse is the primary input device for MicroStation’s graphic user interface. On a wheeled mouse,
the left button is called the data button while the right button is best used as the reset button. The first
time you use MicroStation and click with the right mouse, you will get two options for how the right
button is to be treated. For this book, select the default, i.e. press for reset and press and hold for
popup menu.
• Left button – Click to enter a data point and place coordinate points, such as a line’s start and
end points. You also use it to select commands and menu options from the user interface.
• Right button – Reset performs several different functions, depending upon the current process
taking place. Think of it as the “No” button.
Several view operations can be performed using the keyboard and mouse. For example, you can zoom in
for a closer look at your work, or you can move your viewing window over your work (panning). Here is
how:
• <Shift> and drag while pressing the left mouse button to dynamically pan through your drawing.
• Press or single click the wheel of a wheeled mouse and drag for controlled dynamic panning.
• Press the <Shift> key then press the wheel of a wheeled mouse and drag for rotation.
• Roll the wheel of a wheeled mouse to zoom in and out dynamically.
• Press the <Shift> key and roll the wheel of a wheeled mouse to zoom in and re-center.
• Double click the wheel to fit view.
These are the default mouse functions. If you have assigned other functions to your mouse, your
system may behave differently.
View Toolbar
View Window
(1 to 8)
Task Navigation
Key in AccuDraw
TASK NAVIGATION
A task is simply a logical grouping of tools. Tasks organize the extensive collection of tools by use. Tasks
can contain overlapping sets of tools. For example, a Drawing task and Drawing Composition task
contain the same text placement tools.
Default task lists are provided for Drawing tasks and Drawing Composition tasks.
Expand the entries to see sub-tasks, which correlate to toolboxes. Press and hold on a tool, for example
Place SmartLine, to see all the tools of that type. Quick left mouse click on a tool to execute that
command.
When you press and hold the mouse’s left button, the data button, on a tool in the Main
toolbox, you see a menu that gives you access to all the tools in that toolbox.
You can open an individual toolbox by clicking on a tool and selecting Open as Toolbox from
the pop-up menu. You can then place, or dock, the toolbox in a convenient location anywhere
on the screen. You can also customize the toolboxes. Right click on a tool in the box to display a
list of the tools available in the toolbox. If you enable one that has been disabled, it will appear
in the toolbox.
There are two tools that do not have an associated toolbox, Element Selection and Delete Element. All
the other tools in the Main toolbox have a small black triangle at the lower right corner, indicating that
the associated toolbox includes other tools.
Alert boxes appear whenever you are about to do something in the design file that may be hard to
reverse. Take note and select OK or Cancel carefully.
The first time you click reset, a dialog appears. It prompts you to select the functionality you want to
associate with the right mouse button. The default is the suggested MicroStation behavior, reset.
This menu provides convenient access to tools for manipulating elements, for example, Copy, Move,
Scale and Delete. There are also Cut/Copy/Paste options. Options change depending upon the element
the pointer is over when the menu opens.
The key-in browser is not displayed by default, but can be opened from the Utilities menu on the main
menu bar by selecting Utilities menu > Key-in or Help > Key-in Browser. The browser can be docked at
the top or bottom of the screen.
Click on several different tools and watch as the status bar messages change. The name of the tool is
displayed, followed by a prompt that instructs you how to start using the tool. Notice that when you
View Windows
MicroStation’s design windows are called views. You can open more than
one view to aid in the design process.
MicroStation can have as many as eight views open at any time. They are all active and ready for input.
Titled View 1 through View 8, they provide direct access to your graphic data. The reason for eight view
windows is simple; you may want to view more than one portion of a design at the same time and at
varying degrees of detail.
View windows are re-sizable, movable, and collapsible. Closing all the view windows in a DGN file is not
the same as closing the file. You have closed all of the design windows, but the file is still open. The title
bar at the top of the application window displays the name of the open file.
View Controls
By default, this toolbox appears at the
upper left corner of each view
window. The viewing action will be
applied to the view window from which you select the view-related tool. For example, if you select Fit
View in View 1, only View 1 will be fit to view.
Element Selection is a very versatile tool. Not only can you use it to select individual elements, you can
also use it to modify or move elements and to group elements together.
Certain toolboxes can be undocked by selecting the vertical dotted line on the
side, indicated by the small arrow and tear it away from the border of the
application window, into the drawing area. The vast majority of the tools can
be opened as their own toolbox by a right mouse click and selecting “Open as
Toolbox.”
SNAPPING
All engineering drawing applications include tools to help you select precise coordinate locations in a
design, such as the end point of a line or the center of a circle. This operation is called snapping.
AccuSnap
MicroStation provides a wonderful tool called AccuSnap. With AccuSnap all you need to do is get the
pointer close enough to the point to which you wish to snap and AccuSnap moves to the snap point and
stays there until you move the mouse away. A successful snap using AccuSnap displays a bold, yellow X
at the snap point.
One of the most popular snap modes is the Keypoint snap. This snap mode will find end points
of elements and other points in between, depending on the Keypoint Snap Divisor that is set by
selecting Settings > Locks > Full.
You can open the Snaps menu from the icon on the prompt line at the bottom of the screen or from
Settings menu>Design File>Snaps.
The Snaps available for any given tool will vary with ineligible snaps grayed out.