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Documentation
About Archicad's documenting tools, views, model filtering, layouts, publishing, etc.

Favorites & Keynotes

mattmgut
Booster

I have a general question about Favorites workflow and will use Keynotes as the example. I have looked at several project templates to aid creating our own office standards. I have gravitated towards Views that are set-up with Layers, MVO and GOC settings all saying something like "A1 - Floor Plans" or "A2 - Exterior Elevations" for those particular views. I like the simplicity and clarity.

 

The out-of-the-box template separates Favorites into two basic folders - Design and Documentation. The Documentation is fairly generic and I am wondering if anyone sets up their Favorites such that the Documentation includes folders that are specific to specific drawings. Similar to Views there would be a folder containing on the "A1 - Floor Plan" documentation. It would include Wall Type Labels, Plan Keynotes and Markers typically seen on plans. I recognize that having multiple versions of a label specific to a drawing type could create more work if you decide to change the label.

 

This question arises because when I am adding Keynotes to various drawings I need to constantly change the layer before placement or redefine the favorite - especially if I decide to "replace label." I realize once you have keynote on the drawing type set-up it is not that much more work, but I also like using Favorites as a reminder of what labels go on that particular drawing. Obviously I can organize how I see fit, but curious how others organize their favorites for the sake of productivity and if there is something I missing about Keynotes and layers.

 

Thanks!

 

Matthew

Matthew Guthrie
RHiZO Architecture
MacBook Pro M2 Max, 32GB
macOS 15.2 Sequoia (24C101)
AC 28
1 REPLY 1
Kalib Stewart
Booster

Just came across this, I posted almost the same issue. Keynotes revert layers and it is infuriating when working across multiple views simultaneously. It feels like a bug more than an intention, and changing transfer settings doesn’t help.


I also organise my favourite annotations by view (drawing) folders. It’s the best way to keep drawings graphically consistent and saves time making decisions about colours, line weights, text size etc. I actually went one step further and started organising specific attributes down into cut v cover fills, fill purposes, product composites, and creating lines for specific purposes such as a building wrap line for detailing.

Reg' Architect