EXCEPTIONAL VALUE IN 2D CAD TurboCAD Designer 2D v11 delivers precision drafting and design thats easy to use. The intuitive design tools and drawing aids make it simple to explore ideas. Produce anything from simple sketches to production ready drawings and share in multiple formats including DWG. THE ULTIMATE IN DESIGN PRODUCTIVITY TurboCAD Deluxe 11 makes it easy to design in 2D or 3D with alot of new features - 1.5 Hours of Video Tutorials, guides, and sample models - 2D Geometric and Dimensional Constraints - Complete Set of 2D Drafting Tools - Tool Icon Sizing - Drafting Assistant & Snaps - Layer Duplicate - 500 Floor Plans - SVG Import and Export - Over 7,000 2D symbols and parts - Simplify curves - Advanced Editing - DXF/DWG 2018 Import/Export - Layers and Layer Sets - Block Manager - Architectural Design Tools - Complete File Compatible & Conversion Options - Printing & PDF - Improved Gripper Tool - Updated Interoperability Components (IGES, STEP, SAT, ACIS SAT & SAB, Adobe Illustrator TM, BMP, JPG, PNG, SVG Import and Export) 2D GEOMETRIC AND DIMENSIONAL CONSTRAINTS Dimension and constraint tools are now available to manage the geometric relationships between 2D shapes TOOL ICON SIZING You can now modify a tool palette to use larger or smaller icons. Right click on the tool bar header to display a popup menu for Change Icon Size. This menu now provides options for 64,32,24 and 16-pixel sized icons. The default icon size is 32x32 LAYER DUPLICATE A new command to duplicate a layer and all the objects in that layer is now available through Concept Explorer. To access this command, place your cursor over the layer you want to duplicate, right click and select the Duplicate command. If you Duplicate a sub layer, the new duplicated layer is promoted to a first level layer. SVG IMPORT AND EXPORT Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) is an XML-based vector image format for two-dimensional graphics with support for interactivity and animation. V11 now supports importing and exporting to this new format. SIMPLIFY CURVES Some design tasks prefer higher order curves such as arcs, circles, and/or ellipses over lines.