Course Information
Course Overview
This course is your ultimate guide to learning VB.NET Programming in AutoCAD
This is an intensive course about VB.NET Programming in AutoCAD. There are lots of coding that will walk you through from creating a Project using Visual Studio 2019 to running your finished Plugin in AutoCAD.
You will learn how to use VB.NET very quickly by following all the videos or by coding along with every single method being developed.
By the end of the Course, you will have the confidence to create your own AutoCAD Plugin using VB.NET.
A simple and step-by-step way style of teaching in this course will be very helpful to absorb every concept of VB.NET Programming in AutoCAD.
Course Content
- 10 section(s)
- 104 lecture(s)
- Section 1 Introduction
- Section 2 Exploring AutoCAD .NET API Components
- Section 3 Hello AutoCAD from VB.NET
- Section 4 Creating AutoCAD Objects using VB.NET
- Section 5 Manipulating AutoCAD Objects using VB.NET
- Section 6 Exploring AutoCAD Dictionaries using VB.NET
- Section 7 User Interactions in VB.NET
- Section 8 Selection Sets and Filters
- Section 9 Developing Projects - Hands On
- Section 10 Conclusion
What You’ll Learn
- Students will learn VB dot NET Programming in AutoCAD, Students will have a solid understanding on how to create AutoCAD Plugin/Command, You will learn how to draw different AutoCAD entities through code, You will learn how to use most of the AutoCAD editing commands and manipulate AutoCAD objects, You will learn how to access AutoCAD non-graphical objects (e.g. Layers, LineTypes and TextStyles), You will learn how to apply and use different Selection Sets and Filters in your code to select objects with different filter criteria, Students will be able to create their own Plugin by the end of the course
Skills covered in this course
Reviews
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FFerdinand Fajardo
Getting interesting
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TThành Phạm Minh Thiên
If it included a WinForms section, that would be even better. Thank you so much, teacher.
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JJuan Omar Montenegro Peñafiel
Excelente contenido y exposición de los temas desarrollados.
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LLillian Crist
Very clear, but a bit redundant. It would be helpful to start talking about arguments sent to functions as early as the 2nd section of this course.