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Jul 19, 2016 - Microsoft has released a deployment tool for easy download. Office 2013/2016 Home and Business, HomeBusinessRetail. Visio 2013/2016 Professional volume license, VisioProXVolume. Updates Enabled='TRUE' enables automatic updates for Microsoft Office. There is no progress indicator.
Title blocks on drawings are important for many, many reasons. If your company has created more than a small number of drawings, it’s useful to know who created them, when they were created, who updated the drawings, and when they were updated. Often times, copies of a drawing are e-mailed or sent in printed form to customers, installers, contractors, builders, inspectors.
For these recipients, contact information and drawing scale data can be of utmost importance. As it turns out, much of the information that is imperative to title blocks is already in the drawing.
Through Visio’s SmartShape features, it can automatically be extracted, eliminating the need to re-key it. Other information that is not available by default can be entered in a central location, or extracted from existing data sources, then displayed by cleverly-constructed title block shapes. This article is a first in a series on how you can use Visio’s built-in features, ShapeSheet capabilities and even automation code to make smart Title Block shapes that save you work. Save Time by Using Existing Title Block Shapes Before we spend time creating shapes from scratch, I’d like to note that there are a bunch of pre-made master shapes that can help you to construct title blocks.
The stencil is called: Title Blocks.vss. In Visio 2007 Professional, you can find it by navigating the main menu to: File > Stencils > Visio Extras > Title Blocks While this stencil has been around for several versions, I am not 100% sure if it ships with the Standard version of Visio. So there’s an outside chance that you might not have it on your PC. The stencil contains several pre-made title block shapes, some drawing frames, some borders, and a whole slew of elemental boxes that you can use to assemble to make your own text blocks. By elemental box, I mean a box that has a field label, and a field value.
An example might look like this: [ Creation Date: ] Here’s a peek at the shapes in the Title Blocks stencil: click image to see larger version One key point to note about the elemental shapes: Many of them are already linked to information about the document, so you don’t have to re-enter any information! Link to Existing Information by Inserting Fields If you don’t have the existing Title Block shapes, or you don’t like them, or they are missing something you want, or you’re just a Visio Guy and like to build things yourself, then Visio offers a handy way of linking shapes to existing document information. Under the Insert menu, you’ll find the Field item. This allows you to link the text on a shape to a bit of information stored in the document. Let’s create a simple example that shows the creator of a document.
Just follow the steps below: • Draw a rectangle on a Visio page • Enter text-edit mode by either: double-clicking the shape, or selecting it and pressing F2 • Select Insert > Field from the menu • Choose a Category and a Field name from the various options in the dialog You should see something like this: When you install Microsoft Office, it asks you for your name, and automatically inserts this into newly-created Office documents. Here we can see that Visio automatically found my name and listed it as the creator of the document. If you’re interested in where this field is stored, have a look at the dialog under File > Properties. It looks similar to what you’ll see in other Microsoft applications: And you can see indeed that the creator matches what we’ve got on our shape. Which Information can be inserted as a Field? You might have noticed that there are quite a few fields that you can insert. It’s not too hard to make a title block that stretches with the page.