2018-01-23 09:10 AM - last edited on 2023-05-26 12:03 AM by Gordana Radonic
2018-01-23 09:21 AM
2018-01-23 09:31 AM
Barry wrote:Haha yes. It's the ones not being used I'm interesten in but also duplicates and ...well anomalies... (sloppy dragging of views from project map directly to layout which results in view map chaos).
The Drawing Manager will list all placed drawings.
The problem is it doesn't list the ones that are not placed which is probably more what you need if you are trying to tidy up.
Barry.
2018-01-23 10:30 AM
2018-01-23 01:21 PM
Barry wrote:Like you say it's a lot of work... will scribble down a suggestion for ACxx for handling insane amounts of stuff
I am not sure if this will help.
It sounds like you have a lot of views to sort through.
http://archicad-talk.graphisoft.com/viewtopic.php?p=269008
Barry.
2018-01-23 02:57 PM
2018-01-23 04:53 PM
Erwin wrote:We've set up everything so that we have "active" folders, "template" folders, "user" folders and "control" folders. The problem is basically lack of internal training. We're kind of rushing it all the time and lack of knowledge and experience results in amazing chaos sometimes. ArchiCAD is really nice regarding it's forgiving nature but cleaning a mess after others in large projects is not so funny. Well...we'll have to educate our staff more.
For what it's worth, I've found that having a template that goes in to all ussual phases of project with individual sub folder for the view map and already having the layout book set up for the phases too helps a bit. Less dragging around of views by people and more dragging around of copies of existing layouts to relink and move views on.
Not a solution to the problem at hand, but maybe something to consider in your template for future projects.
I also have a 'trash bin' folder, where I move phases that are closed or other stuff I do not want to see at the moment. Deleting views can't be undone, so I try to not accidentally mess up work. (forgot to save file, deleted views, can't go back, cry over having to recreate layouts or losing work done)