HIde elements
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‎2020-07-15
11:03 AM
- last edited on
‎2024-12-30
02:06 PM
by
Molinda Prey

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‎2020-07-15 11:29 AM
There is no way to hide this by a simple button click, however you. an do the following:
A. move the tree
B. use a silhouette tree - the tree you are using is not only high in polygon count, it is also hideous;
C. use a white cover fill without outline to mask the parts you do not want to see
Design Technology Managers.
All  on macOS | since AC 6
Archicad Framework > Smart Template 27
Smart Tree, Transmittal and Universal Label and other smart GDL Objects
By Architects for Architects.

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‎2020-07-15 03:45 PM
E. Move the section line or add nodes to the section line so it passes around the tree.
Barry.
Versions 6.5 to 27
i7-10700 @ 2.9Ghz, 32GB ram, GeForce RTX 2060 (6GB), Windows 10
Lenovo Thinkpad - i7-1270P 2.20 GHz, 32GB RAM, Nvidia T550, Windows 11
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‎2020-07-15 09:08 PM
I must admit i'm now seriously concerned about a few graphical elements of this package. Ive spent hours trying to make decent drawings, but these 2d tools and layout production are not intuitive like the modelling seems to be. Perhaps im missing something.
If there is no ability to hide a cut object from a view, how does this work when you are in a complex major project like a hospital, and you need to create individual room elevations but you don't have time to place section lines that avoid cutting objects within the room, or creating multiple layers to hide cut objects on?
How do you create decent planning drawings if trees are appearing like this. Are there other tree library parts, or do you rely on photoshop?

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‎2020-07-16 03:13 AM
Mac_the_arc wrote:I am guessing you have your Revit hat on.
Wow, seems ArchiCAD is not so tremendous. Both these options seem like a 'work around'.
Archicad does not work like Revit, so don't expect it to do the same things.
Mac_the_arc wrote:
If there is no ability to hide a cut object from a view, how does this work when you are in a complex major project like a hospital, and you need to create individual room elevations but you don't have time to place section lines that avoid cutting objects within the room, or creating multiple layers to hide cut objects on?
How do you create decent planning drawings if trees are appearing like this. Are there other tree library parts, or do you rely on photoshop?
Me personally, yes, I would cut the sections around objects I don't want to cut or place objects in layers that can be turned off.
To hide elements you could give the a different renovation status to everything else, and then use a renovation filer that hides that status.
That is assuming that you don't want to use the renovation filters for there intended purpose.
Barry.
Versions 6.5 to 27
i7-10700 @ 2.9Ghz, 32GB ram, GeForce RTX 2060 (6GB), Windows 10
Lenovo Thinkpad - i7-1270P 2.20 GHz, 32GB RAM, Nvidia T550, Windows 11

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‎2020-07-16 05:43 AM
The Section Tool doesn't, I'm guessing because it hides all walls and slabs etc that are also cut - which doesn't seem useful especially for a Section

Graphisoft Senior Product Manager
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‎2020-07-16 09:42 PM
M1 Macbook Pro
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‎2020-07-17 09:42 AM
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‎2020-07-17 09:49 AM
Barry wrote:Thanks Barry, the renovation filters was the first good surprise in ArchiCAD and works very smoothly, unlike Revit which is very clunky. That said I cannot yet get my head around the fact that text within a view will appear on all views, I don't see the sense in that. Certain drawings need specific text, and creating multiple layers just to control text seems counter productive so at the moment im placing this on the layouts and leaving the model to update as and when needed. Im sure with time I will learn more workflow options with ArchiCAD.
Mac_the_arc wrote:I am guessing you have your Revit hat on.
Wow, seems ArchiCAD is not so tremendous. Both these options seem like a 'work around'.
Archicad does not work like Revit, so don't expect it to do the same things.
Mac_the_arc wrote:
If there is no ability to hide a cut object from a view, how does this work when you are in a complex major project like a hospital, and you need to create individual room elevations but you don't have time to place section lines that avoid cutting objects within the room, or creating multiple layers to hide cut objects on?
How do you create decent planning drawings if trees are appearing like this. Are there other tree library parts, or do you rely on photoshop?
Me personally, yes, I would cut the sections around objects I don't want to cut or place objects in layers that can be turned off.
To hide elements you could give the a different renovation status to everything else, and then use a renovation filer that hides that status.
That is assuming that you don't want to use the renovation filters for there intended purpose.
Barry.

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‎2020-07-17 10:15 AM
Mac_the_arc wrote:
Lets hope Graphisoft can come up with an ability to fix this, unless im missing something this is a major setback for the workflow within ARCHICAD. As designers and producers of production information we should not be having to think so far in advance in terms of planning where section lines are placed.
I disagree.
We should be placing sections exactly where we want to to be.
If you want the option to not see what is cut, use the elevation tool as suggested by James.
I can't imagine the complexity to control each element to say it shows in sections 1, 2, 5 & 6, but not in sections 2 & 3.
Sure you can simply select an element in a section and say 'Hide', but then how do you select it to 'Un-hide' - as you can't see it.
So you would have to go back to plan and search along the section line to find what is being cut and reset it there?
Or each section would have to have a list in its settings listing all of the elements that are being cut.
All well and good for something as insignificant as a tree, but what if a wall or slab is hidden and gets missed of the final drawings?
It is a nice idea, but I think it would just over complicate things.
Just place the section where required and/or use layer to turn elements on/off.
But that is just my opinion.
Actually you could also set up a Graphic Override to change the element to white.
It won't print but it may still cover what is behind it which isn't a good look.
Maybe we need a true 'Hide' option in graphic overrides rather than just an override.
This has all been discussed before of course, and here is one of a few wishes that apply to this topic.
Barry.
Versions 6.5 to 27
i7-10700 @ 2.9Ghz, 32GB ram, GeForce RTX 2060 (6GB), Windows 10
Lenovo Thinkpad - i7-1270P 2.20 GHz, 32GB RAM, Nvidia T550, Windows 11