Emailing Drawings
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When I send email of drawing it says theres no program to open it....am I saving it incorrectly?
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Are you e-mailing the SKP file to someone who doesn't have SketchUp installed?
If you are e-mailing drawings to others who aren't using SketchUp, you should use File>Export>2D... Choose either JPG or PNG for the file type and export that. Anyone should be able to look at those image types.
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Here's a great way to send someone a drawing, although it is a bit complicated. But compatibility is all but guaranteed.
This requires Adobe Acrobat Pro, FYI, something that a lot of folks have around, and Meshlab, which is Open Source.
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Make a blank document and save it to PDF. I typically make mine 16:10, as that's the aspect ratio that I'm working at (so I make a custom 16"x10" doc, no margins, in Word). Open that in Acrobat Pro.
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Go to SketchUp, select the parts of the model that you want to send (or the entire thing), and export as OBJ. I use the following options:
Export only current selection
Triangulate all faces
Export two-side faces
Swap YZ coordinates (Y is up)- In Meshlab, import the OBJ file, and choose Export Mesh As. Save it as a .U3D file. For this example, I choose no options.
- Open your blank PDF in Acrobat Pro. Then do the following:
Choose Tools>Multimedia>3D Tool. You'll get a crosshair cursor.
Make your view port with this. I typically fill the entire screen.
Acrobat will pop up a file requester dialog. Enter the .U3D file path there. Select Advanced Options. Enter the following options:Launch Settings: Enable When: The page content is opened.
3D: Background color: White
3D: Lighting Scheme: White Lights
3D: Rending Style: Solid (try playing with the other settings for your purposes)
3D: Show toolbar: (checked)See attachment. It works in any recent Adobe Acrobat reader.
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