A ng Pilipinas ay nahahati sa kapuluan at iba’t-ibang rehiyon.Isa ito sa mga pangunahing kadahilanan kung bakit tayo ay may mga yunik na dayalekto na ginagamit sa ating tahanan, paaralan, opisina at sa pang araw-araw na pakikikpagtalastasan sa ating kapwa. (Iloko, Ilokano) La Union at mga lalawigan ng Ilocos, Cagayan Valley, Babuyan, Mindoro, Mindanao 62. ILONGOT Silanganing Nueva Vizcaya, (Bugkalut, Bukalot, Lingotes) Kanluraning Quirino; Luzon 63. INGLES Isa sa pangalawang wika ng Pilipinas 64. Mga ibat ibang dayalekto sa pilipinas at mga halimbawa nito? Mga halimbawa ng mga ilog sa pilipinas? Ilog Cagayan. Mga ibat ibang Dayalekto sa pilipinas? Pambansang Museo ng Pilipinas Museo Sugbo Casa Gorordo Museo ng Ayala Museo ng Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Museo sa CCP at AFP Bibak Museo ng Kultura. Halimbawa ng mga dayalekto sa pilipinas. Ito ay nakasalig sa pangunguna ng Tagalog kasunod ng iba pang umiiral na mga pagbigkas sa Pilipinas. Tagalog:Pangunahing wika ng mga naninirahan sa Katimugang bahagi ng Luzon. Sinasalita ng 24% ng kabuuang bilang ng mga Pilipino sa buong kapuluan. Taal na gamit sa mga lalawigan ng Cavite, Laguna, Bataan, Batangas, Rizal, Quezon (kilala.
Well, it’s nearly June already and I’m just now getting back to looking at this whole subject. I’m finally close to a working prototype system for doing my P&ID’s in Autocad® Electrical 2015. And to make it more interesting I am incorporating a nested project concept that I picked up at Autodesk University 2014 in Las Vegas last December.
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The AutoCAD Block Library now ships with a total of 335 P&ID drawings which now follows the ANSI/ISA Standard 5.1-2009. Much of the library contains dynamic blocks, so that symbols can be changed on the fly.
When I left off at the end of, I had just covered, in such a way that not only is the block inserted, but the Edit Component dialog is also called. I also went into the fairly elaborate and convoluted method I rigged up (with paper clips and chewing gum) for inserting a P&ID line tag that has multiple, editable attributes in a single. In this installment I’ll show how I used the Symbol Builder to create blocks that contain multiple tags, but need only one tag number.

I’ll also talk about the nested project concept, and how I’ve got it set up for my company. Hopefully some of this will be useful to you, so let’s dive into the blocks first. Before I go into the blocks I’ve had to create, I want to just mention the attribute. This attribute makes it possible to show the same physical device on multiple sheets while only counting it once. For example, if I show a valve in my P&ID tagged NV-600, I can show the solenoid for that valve in my schematics tagged SV-600. By linking them using wdtagalt, either one will update if the other is changed, but will still be seen across these documents as one device. One of the first challenges I came up against in creating my valve library, was the fact that a lot of my symbols needed to have multiple tags on them, each carrying the same tag value, as in this image.
The solution to this one was actually quite simple, but not something you would think of without a little bit of digging. In symbol builder, I tweaked my block so that the top value of each of the bubbles was a preset attribute, but not part of the tag. That way if I ever need to have an exception to any of these values, I can change it in the Component Editor by selecting Show/Edit Miscellaneous.
The tag number value is set in the “NV” bubble with the regular “TAG1” attribute. The other three bubbles get their value by putting an attribute in them called “copytag”.
In the above image, the nodes represent wire connection points. Now, normally my component tagging settings are%F%N which says that the tag will be the combination of the value of “Family” and “Tag1”. I then set them to be sequential, with some starting value depending on the discipline of the P&ID. In a case such as this, where I want the family to be preset by a different attribute, I simply make sure that the “family” attribute is blank. That way when the symbol is placed, all I get is the number.
How do I get these same bubbles to show up with Family in the top section and Number in the bottom section, and have them together be the tag value? As in: Well, that one turned out to be fairly simple as well, but again, if you didn’t know what you were looking for you might never find it. The trick is to make each piece of the tag an attribute, the top being named TAG_PART1, and the bottom TAG_PART2.
Then, when the symbol is placed, and the tag number created based on your project settings, it will break the tag into two parts and populate them as you see above. How it knows exactly where to break the tag is based on those project settings. I told you above that my tags are set to be%F%N.%F represents the value of Family,%N the sequential number. So AcadE knows to break the tag number between these two values. The rest of my symbol creation is just going to be a matter of using the right combinations of these tricks, as well as knowing where to use parent versus child symbols. So, from here out it’s just busy work.
Setting up my project structure was a bit trickier. We have 3 disciplines we want to use AutoCad Electrical for. Our electrical schematics, Instrument Loop Sheets, and P&ID’s. Each of these has a distinct project suffix; -05,-06 & -01 respectively. So, it really didn’t make sense to just put them all in one project. We tried this at first, but then if I had 10 sheets in the schematics, and my first loop sheet was sheet 1 of 10, the title block showed it as sheet 11 of 20. Causing mass confusion in the ranks.