2019-12-31 03:29 PM - last edited on 2023-05-30 12:23 PM by Rubia Torres
2020-01-02 06:11 PM
2020-01-02 10:14 PM
2020-01-03 05:09 PM
2020-01-03 11:12 PM
2020-01-04 05:25 PM
zesdras wrote:Of course if you can edit the patch as a simple 2D drawing !
unfortunately it can't be editable
2020-01-04 10:36 PM
2020-01-06 04:03 PM
Christophe wrote:Thank you my friend! But I can't understand the code to apply the changes that I've desired. Maybe the better solution for my case - with zero knoledge in archicad programation - is the second pln file with full of details to copy and paste.
zesdras wrote:Of course if you can edit the patch as a simple 2D drawing !
unfortunately it can't be editable
1 - Select the patch
2 - Open the patch as an object
3 - Modify the symbol as a 2D drawing
4 - Save and enjoy
2020-01-06 04:10 PM
Richard wrote:
Having all your standard details in one file makes sense. You can group similar details on individual floors for example.
I think a better workflow is to have a single detail per worksheet, with one view per detail. (These views can be grouped in folders, too.) If you have your Detail.PLN and your Project.PLN open at the same time, you can use the Organizer to open the detail file on one side and the plan file on the other. Copying details can then be drag-and-drop from one to the other. (Make sure that Navigator previews have been saved in the detail file.) The only downside is that updating is slow unless both files are open at the same time.
Another method is to use PMKs with the Publisher. You create a new Publisher Set in the Detail.PLN for your specific project. You can drag-and-drop the Details into the Publisher Set and set the output to be PMKs and the folder that they are published to is in your individual project folder. You will get a bunch of PMK files in your project folder, which can then be multiple selected and dragged onto your Layout. If you want to edit a detail, you can create a Worksheet for that detail and either copy the original detail for editing, or explode the PMK in that worksheet for editing. A MOD file works, too. PMKs are nice, though, because they are very compact and don't slow down the project by much.
2020-01-06 04:20 PM
zesdras wrote:It is not code but a simple two-dimensional drawing.
...I can't understand the code to apply the changes that I've desired...