As I start thinking about deploying AutoCAD® Architecture and AutoCAD® MEP 2018, I have been considering how to manage having multiple file formats in use at the same time. Not that we have not had to deal with that in the past; but we have been primarily using 2013-format releases for quite some time, so I will need to make and keep users aware of the fact that once a file is saved in the 2018 format, there is no going back.
One “trick” I personally have used to check on the file format of a file prior to opening it is discussed in this Autodesk Knowledge Network article. You can determine the file format of an AutoCAD® drawing file by opening the file in a plain text editor (like Notepad) and looking at the first six characters. That article lists the “codes” for the 2000 through 2013 file formats. Shaan Hurley, in this article in his Between the Lines blog, has a more complete listing of the codes, including the fact that the new 2018 file format is AC1032. Scroll down…
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