A Lot table allows you to include information about traverses (lots) that might otherwise clutter up a drawing. Any lot label in a drawing can be placed in a Lot Table where each row represents a labeled lot in the drawing.
Each drawing can contain only one lot table. For other drawing tables see Drawing Tables.
| Lot | Name | Acres | SqFt | LinError | <- column headings |
| T1 | Lot 1A | 1.75 | 76,230.0 | 0.07 | <- table itemm |
The Point and Lot tables are unique in that in addition to creating references like P1, P2 for Points or T1, T2 for Lots, TPC can use the Point or Lot name as the reference. You will probably prefer this for the Point table and may want to consider it for the Lot table.e.
You determine how to reference them in the table dialog's Format field. Include the letter 'N' to add a column for the lot name in the table and TPC will reference the table items as T1, T2, etc. Omit the letter 'N' (default) and TPC will use the point label as the reference.
Table styles determine how items are added to a table. The style can be All or Manual. You can start with one style, like All and have TPC add the appropriate table items, then swtich the table to Manual and fine tune the selection of items.
With this style, all the lot labels are added to the table. Remember that a lot label has to appear in the drawing before it can be added to a table.
For more control over the table items, choose the Manual Style. When a table style is set to Manual, you can append points in the order you want them.
Drawing Tables
Line Table
Curve Table
Point Table
Lot Table
Labeling Drawing Objects
Smart Drawing Objects
Working with Drawing Objects
Drawing Commands
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