The visual style also controls the display of backgrounds and shadows in the viewport.
Backgrounds
In this post, we will learn about AutoCAD environment, and help ourselves using the proper vocabulary and be calling an object by their right name. The Drawing Area. The drawing are in AutoCAD is made of a universe of points where each has x, y and z coordinates. You can actually draw using the coordinate system.
![How to turn on sky in autocad 2016 How to turn on sky in autocad 2016](https://bimtrack.co/media/1853/bim-track-release.jpg?anchor=center&mode=crop&width=1400&rnd=131859243790000000)
You can use a solid color, a gradient fill, an image, the sun & sky, or an image-based lighting (IBL) map as a background in the viewport in any 3D visual style, even one that does not shade objects. When Background is set to On in the current visual style, the background is displayed.
To use a background, you can
- First create a named view with a background and set the named view as current in the viewport.
- Display the Background dialog box (BACKGROUND command) and set a background.
- Display the Render Environment & Exposure palette (RENDERENVIRONMENT command), and use IBL or a custom background.
![How To Turn Sky On In Autocad 2016 How To Turn Sky On In Autocad 2016](/uploads/1/2/3/9/123926501/436476486.jpg)
Shadows
Shaded objects in a viewport can display shadows. Ground shadows are shadows that objects cast on the ground. Mapped object shadows are shadows cast by objects onto other objects. The lighting in the viewport must be from user-created lights or the sun for mapped object shadows to be displayed. Where shadows overlap, they appear darker.
Note: To display mapped object shadows, hardware acceleration is required.
Displaying shadows can slow performance when viewing a 3D model. You can turn off shadows in the current visual style while you work and turn them back on when you need them.
In the Properties window, you can set the Shadow Display property for an object: casts shadows, receives shadows, casts and receives shadows, or ignores shadows.
Note: Starting with AutoCAD 2016-based products, all lights generate and all objects cast and receive shadows when rendering. The Shadow Display property affects the display of objects in a viewport when a 3D visual style is current.