![]() ![]() Like units for like units if that is the decimal or inch conventions being used - which is pretty universal. Which often means the person whom is doing that work needs to upskill on how to change their import settings in Lectra. If you import the same DXF you exported from CLO3D into illustrator and it came in correctly at scale THEN that demonstrates the fault does not lay with the CLO3D file BUT with the Lectra import interpolation. Which means CLO3D have no part in that process, it is Lectra (or the CAD operator receiving the datafile) whom need to do some legwork. ![]() Bemaniak, your post doesn't make much technical sense on the import to Lectra, and the asking for it to be resolved by CLO3D? The fault according to your post as I read it is 100% with Lectra's import translator.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |