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2008-12-23 05:31 PM - last edited on 2023-05-18 12:25 PM by Gordana Radonic
2008-12-28 03:24 AM
TomWaltz wrote:Oh, I see that now.
It will if you check the box to do so in the Settings Menu.
2008-12-31 09:17 PM
Karl wrote:Ditto on all counts. As the Worksheet tool currently exists, it serves merely as an organizational tool. We use the Detail tool strictly for details, and Worksheets for everything else (referenced Drawings, Legends and General Notes, Key Plans...)
I too recommend only live views for all plans - enlarged or not.
Back to the question in the subject: the obnoxious but true answer is that the Worksheet Tool and Detail Tool have (1) different buttons in the tool palette, and (2) different folders in the Navigator.
Since a tool can have its own defaults, you can have different default settings for the Detail tool from the Worksheet tool. For organizing things, some might prefer to put Details in...Detail viewpoints. This leaves Worksheets to be anything you want to have its own 2D view.
For example: if you need to bring in an editable DWG (as opposed to importing onto a layout for reference), bring it into a Worksheet (assuming it is not an external Detail that should be a Detail viewpoint [just for organizational purposes]). In the 'old' days, we would bring in dwg plans into fake stories so that they could be ghosted for tracing/etc. With Trace & Reference, the fake story is not needed since anything can be a trace reference - so Worksheets are a convenient place to put this stuff.
Cheers,
Karl
2009-01-06 06:41 PM
Laura wrote:Worksheets + Trace Reference are a very powerful combo. Layers, layer combos and fake stories needed when all the data was 'modelspace' based are not needed any more (like: the keyplan drawings can go to the ArchiCAD layer; 2D project geometry can go there; the referenced drawings thing is huge; etc.). And also in terms of workflow and team training/organization (probably even more so with Teamwork), there is a 2D/annotation territory clearly separate from the model, even in terms of the tools available. Only now I am starting to get it.
As the Worksheet tool currently exists, it serves merely as an organizational tool. We use the Detail tool strictly for details, and Worksheets for everything else (referenced Drawings, Legends and General Notes, Key Plans...)
2009-01-06 06:46 PM
Ignacio wrote:
there is a 2D/annotation territory clearly separate from the model, even in terms of the tools available.
2009-01-19 10:17 PM
2009-12-12 07:18 PM
David wrote:But can't you control a detail to be any scale you want, even maintaining the same scale as the original view from which the detail is taken?
the Detail tool doubles the scale whereas the Worksheet maintains the same scale.
2009-12-12 11:21 PM
cremsberg wrote:Yes. There is essentially no difference between the two tools. The difference is that as two tools, each can have its own customized settings, and any views created are segregated in the view map.
But can't you control a detail to be any scale you want, even maintaining the same scale as the original view from which the detail is taken?
2010-04-16 06:50 AM
2010-04-19 04:54 AM
2010-04-19 05:56 AM