is a LISP routine that inserts sequential labels into AutoCAD drawings.
This program (LISP routine) is very useful, for example, for fire alarm drawings when assigning sequential addresses for smoke detectors, or in architectural drafting for rooms or parking space numbering.
The label can be a single or a two-row entity, and it is possible to underline it, or to have a separation line for a two-row label. It is also possible to combine up to five (up to ten for two-row labels) numeric, changeable, alphabetical, and non-changeable parts in the same label.
The change rate for a numeric part is set by increment, which can be positive or negative, and each increment controls only the correspondent part of the label. This feature makes it possible to have complex labels where each part has its own change sequence.
Navigation buttons let you check a label's behavior after its structure had been set. Users can save the last label and its settings in a separate file for later use.
In addition, the program also allows you to skip numbers and change any label element or increment without terminating the routine.
Sequential Labeling Generator runs on
Windows 95/98/Me/NT/2000/Windows 10/11
and is available under the
Demo
license
— the installer is 13 KB.
We’ve catalogued it under
AutoCAD Utilities.
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