Determining plotted text size Dimension text height should be set so that it reads correctly at which stage of the deliverable, guiding the architect's choice of annotation scale and text height?

Difficulty: Easy

Correct Answer: The Finished plot

Explanation:


Introduction / Context:
Annotation scaling and text height are chosen so plotted drawings are legible at the sheet scale. Whether work is done in model or paper space, the ultimate criterion is readability on the printed or published sheet seen by builders and reviewers.



Given Data / Assumptions:

  • Text must be readable after plotting at the intended scale.
  • Architects use annotation scales or paper-space text to control final height.
  • The client-facing artifact is the printed or published sheet (hard copy or PDF) at a stated scale.


Concept / Approach:
Best practice sets target plotted text height (for example, 1/8 in or 3 mm on paper). Model-space text height is then scaled by viewport scale, or annotation scaling is used, so that the finished plot meets the target. Thus, the determinant is the finished plotted output.



Step-by-Step Solution:
Identify the endpoint that matters to readers: the plotted sheet.Recognize that settings in model or paper space are means to achieve the plotted height.Select “The Finished plot.”



Verification / Alternative check:
Check CAD standards: they specify plotted text heights and require scaling accordingly in model or paper space.



Why Other Options Are Wrong:

  • Model space / paper space: these are authoring contexts, not the final criterion.
  • The PDF file: a container; what counts is the plotted scale and legibility.


Common Pitfalls:
Using inconsistent text heights across viewports; always match plotted height targets for uniform readability.


Final Answer:
The Finished plot

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