For more information about choosing between Relative or Full Paths, see Understanding Relative vs Full Paths.Ĭlick OK.
To save the full path instead, uncheck this box. To save the location of this hatch pattern set relative to your current Profile, select Relative Path.To change the default save location of this hatch pattern set, click and select the desired local or network folder.As you enter the name, the hatch pattern's file name is automatically populated in the Location field. Enter a name for the hatch pattern set in the Title field.The Add Hatch Pattern Set dialog box appears. The Manage Hatch Pattern Sets dialog box appears.Ĭlick Add. On the Properties tab, select Manage from the Hatchmenu. Right-click the rectangle markup and select Properties.Create a rectangle markup anywhere on the PDF.This procedure creates a blank PDF and a rectangle markup in order to access it, but it's just one of many ways to get to it, including from the Properties tab of an existing shape markup, or from the Appearance Settings Toolbar.
Hatch patterns are managed with the Manage Hatch Pattern Sets dialog box. Hatch pattern sets can be exported, much like Line Styles or Tool Sets, and shared on a network drive or imported by another Revu user. Here's a regularized/streamlined version of the same scheme: Curiously, in working out a streamlined definition, I discovered that it's actually irregular - its members are not of consistent widths. But it didn't look complex enough that it should really take that many lines of defining code. I tried Chip Harper's pattern, just to compare it to the "look" of the ones I posted links to, and found it's essentially a double-line version of the scheme in the first link.