help.autodesk.com Open in urlscan Pro
23.41.180.138  Public Scan

Submitted URL: https://url5019.autodeskcommunications.com/ss/c/ynZaXbr4lYmZLCS3egt3Js9AkBk5BpUmZ1lEF2KsYlgzl6zPCRxdkE_-rse1xTsxbSf31Ly72bHh2cUHRNs5D3Sf5UT...
Effective URL: https://help.autodesk.com/view/ACD/2024/ENU/?guid=GUID-BBEA1F71-EB16-4D49-80D9-970A6909F508&source_uuid=8b4620ce42d71bc040...
Submission: On February 14 via api from US — Scanned from DE

Form analysis 2 forms found in the DOM

GET .

<form class="ui-search-field" method="GET" action="." role="search">
  <input type="text" name="query" aria-label="Search" placeholder="Enter a keyword" spellcheck="true">
  <button aria-label="Submit" type="submit" tabindex="-1"></button>
  <button aria-label="Clear" type="reset" tabindex="-1"></button>
</form>

<form class="was-this-helpful__feedback" aria-hidden="true"></form>

Text Content

 * Help Home
 * Quick References
    * What's New
    * New Features Overview (Video)
    * The Hitchhiker's Guide to AutoCAD
    * Have You Tried
    * Commands
    * System Variables
    * Developer Documentation

 * Sign In
 * English (US)
    1.  English (US)
    2.  简体中文
    3.  繁體中文
    4.  Čeština
    5.  Deutsch
    6.  English (UK)
    7.  Español
    8.  Français
    9.  Magyar
    10. Italiano
    11. 日本語
    12. 한국어
    13. Polski
    14. Português (Brasil)
    15. Русский



 * What's New in AutoCAD
   * New Features Overview (Video)
   * What's New in AutoCAD 2024
   * Try What's New in AutoCAD 2024
   * What's New in Previous Releases
 * Getting Started
 * Have You Tried
   * Welcome to Have You Tried
   * Looking Back at 2023
   * Using Annotative Objects and Annotation Scaling
   * Layers Tips and Tricks
   * Quickly Output PDF & DWF Files
   * Learning AutoCAD
   * User Interface and Customization
   * Drawing Setup and Management
   * View Objects
   * Use Drafting Aids
   * Work with Objects
     * Joining 2D Objects
     * Breaking Objects
     * Matching Properties
     * The Divide and Measure Commands
     * The Stretch and Lengthen Commands
     * Window, Fence, Lasso, and More
     * Work with Stacked Objects
     * Accessing Data from the Clipboard
     * Just Grip It!
     * Rotate and Scale Objects by Reference
     * Purge and Overkill
     * Associative Arrays
     * Groups
     * Create Boundaries Efficiently
   * Work with Annotation
   * Work with Blocks
   * Collaborate with Others
 * AutoCAD User's Guide
 * Cross Platform
 * Subscription Benefits
 * Customization and AutoLISP
 * Installation
 * One AutoCAD Release Notes




 
 
Share
 * Email
 * Facebook
 * Twitter
 * LinkedIn


HAVE YOU TRIED: JUST GRIP IT!

Do you find yourself frequently lengthening or resizing objects? Or what about
copying or moving and then rotating an object? Do you wish you could use one
command to perform both a copy and scale? Do you wish you could stretch, move,
copy, rotate, scale, or mirror objects without either typing the commands or
clicking the ribbon? Then, it's time to look at grips or maybe you already use
grips and are looking for some new techniques.

Note: The video doesn't contain audio or closed captions.
Video Player is loading.
Play
Play
Mute

Current Time 0:00
/
Duration 0:52
Loaded: 0%


0:00
Progress: 0%
 
Playback Rate
 * 2x
 * 1.5x
 * 1.25x
 * 1x, selected
 * 0.5x

1x
Descriptions
 * descriptions off, selected

Captions
 * captions off, selected

Chapters

Audio Track

Fullscreen

This is a modal window.


Note: Steps, images, and videos may differ slightly from your version of the
product.


WHAT ARE GRIPS

Grips are small squares, rectangles, and triangles that appear on selected
objects. You can stretch, move, copy, rotate, scale, and mirror objects using
grips without having to enter any commands.




TURNING GRIPS ON

First, let's make sure grips are on.

 1. Right-click in the drawing area and select Options.
 2. In the Options dialog box, Selection tab, make sure that Show Grips is
    selected.
    


USING GRIP MODES

Grip modes are the editing options that you can use when grips are selected. The
default grip mode is STRETCH. Once you select an object's grip, each time you
press the Spacebar or Enter, the next mode becomes active. The grip mode order
is:

 * Stretch
 * Move
 * Rotate
 * Scale
 * Mirror

Note: Copy is not a grip mode but can be selected as an option within any of the
grip modes.

Let's try cycling through the grip modes. For these examples we'll use the
Spacebar to change the grip mode, but Enter works as well.

 1. Draw a line and select it to display the grips.
    
    There is a square grip at each end and one at the midpoint.

 2. Select one of the end grips.
    
    It changes color to indicate it's selected.

 3. Move the cursor around.
    
    The line segment stretches as you move the cursor. The stretch is temporary
    until you select a point.
    
    Note: When using grips, you can select points using any of the usual methods
    such as clicking in the drawing, entering coordinates, and using object
    snaps.
 4. Press the Spacebar.
    
    Notice that the command prompt now shows you're in the move mode.
    
    
    Note: Cursor badges indicate when you are in move, rotate, or scale grip
    modes but not stretch or mirror.
    
 5. Move the cursor around and the line moves with it.
    
    Again, until you specify a destination point the action is temporary. You
    can press ESC at any time to exit the action.

 6. Continue pressing the Spacebar to cycle through the grip modes.
    
    The command prompt indicates the current mode. You can move the cursor to
    confirm the mode. Eventually you cycle back to the stretch mode.

 7. In any of the grip modes, type C and the press the Spacebar.
    
    Now a copy is made while stretching, moving, rotating, scaling, or
    mirroring. Keep selecting destination points to create multiple copies while
    in any of the grip modes.

Try these same steps with arcs, circles, and polylines, selecting different
grips on the various objects.

Tip: From a selected grip, you can switch to a specific grip mode from the
right-click menu and even access options like Base Point and Copy as well.


CHANGING THE BASE POINT

The grip you select is the base point for the current grip mode. You can use the
base point option to change this during any of the grip modes.

 1. Select the line previously drawn.
 2. Select one of the end grips.
 3. Press the Spacebar until you are in the rotate mode.
    Notice that the line is rotating around the endpoint where you selected the
    grip. But let's say you wanted to rotate it around the midpoint of the line.
    
 4. Type B and press the Spacebar to select the base point option.
 5. Select the midpoint grip as the new base point.
    Note: You may need to press F3 to turn object snaps off.
 6. Rotate the line.
    


MULTIPLE COPIES

When using grips, you can stay in the grip mode and make multiple copies of an
object. Let's use rotation as an example.

 1. Draw a horizontal line.
 2. Select the line.
 3. Select one of the end grips.
 4. Press the Spacebar until the rotate grip mode is active.
 5. Type C and press the Spacebar to copy the object as you rotate it.
 6. Enter 30 as the first rotation angle.
 7. Enter 20 as the next angle.
    
    Notice the line is rotated and copied from the original line, not the
    previous copy.

 8. Enter -25 for the next angle.
    
 9. Press Esc to exit.


USING A ROTATION SNAP WHILE COPYING WITH GRIPS

Now we can take it a step further. Let's say you have an object that you want to
copy multiple times, and you want the rotation angle to be the same between each
successive object.

Note: For these examples, turn off ortho mode (F8) and object snaps (F3).
 1. Draw a horizontal line.
 2. Select the line.
 3. Select one of the end grips.
 4. Press the Spacebar until the rotate grip mode is active.
 5. Type C and press the Spacebar to copy the object as you rotate it.
 6. Enter 30 as the first rotation angle.
    
    This becomes the angle for the rotation snap for each copy.

 7. Hold down the Ctrl key and drag the cursor to create more copies.
    
    Your cursor snaps to 30-degree angles as you drag it.

 8. Keep Ctrl pressed and continue clicking until you create several lines
    rotated from the original line at 30-degree increments.
    
    Note: Experiment with pressing the Ctrl key and making a few copies,
    releasing the Ctrl key and making a few more copies, and finally pressing
    the Ctrl key again for a few more copies. Pressing the Ctrl key will snap to
    the angle used right before pressing Ctrl.


USING A DISTANCE SNAP WHILE COPYING WITH GRIPS

Like the snap rotation example, you can use a distance as a move snap while
copying with grips.

 1. Draw a 0.5 x 0.5 rectangle.
 2. Select the rectangle and select the grip on the lower-right corner.
 3. Press the Spacebar to switch to the move grip mode.
 4. Type C and press the Spacebar to copy the object rather than move it.
 5. Enter 1,0 to copy the object over 1 unit.
    Note: If dynamic input (F12) is off, enter @1,0 to copy the unit over 1
    unit.
 6. Hold the Ctrl key down while making the rest of the copies.
    
    The preceding copy you made defined the snap distance for any subsequent
    copies made while holding Ctrl.

 7. Continue pressing Ctrl and click to use the snap distance while making more
    copies.
    
 8. Release Ctrl when you don't want to use the snap distance for additional
    copies.


GRIP MENUS

Instead of selecting a grip as in the previous exercise, just hover the cursor
over a grip. A menu displays with actions associated with the grip. Depending on
the object selected, and the grip, the menu options will vary. Not all grips
have grip menus. Grips with menus are called multifunctional grips.

 1. Draw a polyline with at least three segments.
 2. Select the polyline.
 3. Hover the cursor over one of the end grips to see the grip menu.
    
 4. Hover the cursor over one of the segment's midpoint grips to see its grip
    menu.
    
 5. Click a menu option and try it. Press Esc to exit.
 6. Try this again with an arc.
    
 7. And finally, with a hatch object.
    

Note: If you select the grip, you can press Ctrl to cycle through the grip menu
options.



SELECTING MULTIPLE GRIPS WHILE STRETCHING

There may be times when you want to select more than one grip at a time. Say you
want to stretch from two or more grips while not affecting the geometry between
those grips.

 1. Draw a polyline similar to the following image.
    
 2. Select the polyline.
 3. Before you select any grips, hold down the Shift key.
 4. While pressing Shift, select grips as shown in the following image.
    
 5. Once you have the grips selected, release the Shift key.
 6. Drag one of the grips and notice how the segments between the grips remain
    constant while the other segments stretch.
    

Note: Using a window to select multiple grips is not supported.


GRIPS SYSTEM VARIABLES

System Variable Description Default Value Saved In DYNINFOTIPS Controls whether
tips are displayed for using Shift and Ctrl when editing with grips. 1 Registry
GRIPBLOCK Controls the display of grips in blocks. 0 Registry GRIPCOLOR Controls
the color of unselected grips. 150 Registry GRIPCONTOUR Controls the color of
the grip outline. 251 Registry GRIPDYNCOLOR Controls the color of custom grips
for dynamic blocks. 140 Registry GRIPHOT Controls the color of selected grips.
12 Registry GRIPHOVER Controls the fill color of an unselected grip when the
cursor pauses over it. 11 Registry GRIPMULTIFUNCTIONAL Specifies the access
methods for multifunctional grip options. 3 (bitcode) Registry GRIPOBJLIMIT
Suppresses the display of grips when the selection set includes more than the
specified number of objects. 100 Registry GRIPS Controls the display of grips on
selected objects. 2 Registry GRIPSIZE Sets the size of the grip box, in device
independent pixels. 5 Registry GRIPSUBOBJMODE Controls whether grips are
automatically made hot when subobjects are selected. 1 (bitcode) Registry
GRIPTIPS Controls the display of grip tips when the cursor hovers over grips on
dynamic blocks and custom objects that support grip tips. 1 Registry

Note: Many of these system variables can be set in the Options dialog box,
Selection tab.

RELATED CONCEPTS

 * About Editing with Grips
 * About Grips on Dynamic Blocks
 * About Modifying Leaders With Grips
 * Welcome to Have You Tried


WAS THIS INFORMATION HELPFUL?

 * Yes
 * No




Except where otherwise noted, this work is licensed under a Creative Commons
Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. Please see the
Autodesk Creative Commons FAQ for more information.

 * Privacy Statement
 * Legal Notices & Trademarks
 * Report Noncompliance
 * © 2024 Autodesk Inc. All rights reserved