In der Standardversion von AutoCAD 2004 können nur Blöcke und Schraffurn in die neuen Paletten aufgenommen werden.
Ellen Finkelstein beschreibt in http://usa.autodesk.com/adsk/servlet/item?siteID=123112&id=3368975&linkID=2475176 wie man mit einer undokumentierten Schnittstelle auch LISP-Funktionen in die Toolbar aufnehmen kann !
Creating a Command Tool Palette
An undocumented type of tool palette is the command tool palette. There is no support or interface for this type of tool palette, and the best way to start is to use an existing command tool palette and modify it. This is an advanced topic, and I’ll just briefly explain it here.
Tool palettes (tabs on the Tool Palettes window) are .atc files (although they become .xtp files when you export them). On my Windows® XP system, their default location is c:\ Documents and Settings\[username]\Application Data\Autodesk\AutoCAD 2004\R16.0\enu\Support\ToolPalette\Palettes. Whew! Because your system may be different, from the Tools menu choose Options, and click the Files tab. Double-click Tool Palettes File Locations to see the location on your system. (However, on my system, this displays only to the level of the ToolPalette folder.) There you see the .atc files for the three default tool palettes. You also have an Images folder that contains the images for the icons.
The .atc file is a text file that you can modify. It has many codes that I certainly can’t figure out, but for a command tool palette, the important parts are the tool name, image name, and the macro that executes the command (see Figure 6). Following is an example of a command tool palette that does one thing: execute the Line command.
......
Viel Spaß beim Ausprobieren - ich habe es allerdings noch nicht getestet.
Gruß Jan :-)
------------------
jan :-)
Eine Antwort auf diesen Beitrag verfassen (mit Zitat/Zitat des Beitrags) IP