We saved the line style, calling it “Nothing”, assigned it to the lines in question and they disappeared! Exactly what our customer wanted.Ĭreating a new line style and assigning it to a line, in more detail: The resultant line style formatting, as shown above, was: This suited the scale of the drawing, but could be increased if necessary. Line segment length set to 0.00001, which is one hundred thousandth of a mm.In this case we effectively wanted a line that was all gap, ie, nothing visible, so we created a new line style with the following formatting: The third line is the same as the first line, but it has bold segments at each end of the line because the first character is a B instead of an A.The second line has a segment 1mm long, followed by a gap of 1mm, then a line 0.5mm long, followed by a gap of 0.5mm, and this pattern is repeated for the length of the line.The first line has a segment 1mm long, followed by a gap of 1mm, and this pattern is repeated for the length of the line.Here are some examples of line style formats and how the lines look. A negative value indicates a gap between segments.A positive value indicates a physical line segment.The numbers control the line segment lengths and gap lengths. The line style format we used was: A, 0.0001, -100. We were able to achieve what he wanted by creating a new line style that was effectively blank and assigning that to the lines in question. Unfortunately the usual technique of right-clicking on the lines and selecting “Hide/Show Edges” didn’t give him the result he wanted. The view was set to the usual display mode of “Hidden Lines Removed”, but removing a few extra visible lines would make the view clearer and easier to understand. Recently a customer wanted to hide just a few lines from a drawing view.