Of course, you'll notice that these component schedules only give volume, not surface area of components. For a composite wall, the surface area is the same for all faces (ignoring solid element operations).
For a complex profiled wall, the length and/or surface area would be of interest, but only the length of the entire wall can be obtained. Otherwise, just volume. Useful for concrete assemblies, but not too useful for other materials. Lists have to be used to address anything beyond this.
Attached is a standard US template profiled wall example with crown and obscene base. You'll see in the schedule that only two volumes are shown because the same fill is used for the crown and base. To separate those out, a different fill needs to be assigned in the profile editor - either by choosing an existing fill, or duplicating an existing one and giving it a new name.
Karl
One of the forum moderators
AC 28 USA and earlier • macOS Sequoia 15.2, MacBook Pro M2 Max 12CPU/30GPU cores, 32GB