2008-05-19 12:58 PM - last edited on 2024-05-03 12:02 PM by Aruzhan Ilaikova
2008-06-05 09:31 PM
Djordje wrote:Djordje,
Do yourself a favour, regardless of what the GS marketing tells you:
Switch the Coordinates and Control box on. Tracker off. Windows/Palettes. Place them in the bottom or top of the screen.
2008-06-08 01:40 PM
Matthew wrote:i figured as much. it seems very rare that someone would switch from one BIM to another. i guess i never thought about it before because i did it a couple of times. i hope this would be the last time though.
hey matthew, did you switch from revit, too, or is it your job as a 'consultant' to be on the know? what are you a consultant of, if i may ask?I guess you could say I am a BIM consultant, though I don't care much for the acronym. I still prefer Graphisoft's "Virtual Building" and I kind of like the new "IPD" or "Integrated Project Delivery" as it applies to the construction process.
Matthew wrote:i don't really have to know all that, do I. I mean the icons should be somewhere on some menu-, option- or toolbar.
Shift click = select/deselect regardless of the active tool (also accumulate/de-accumulate selections)
Spacebar click = Magic Wand
Simple click = use active tool (or deselect if something is selected)
and don't forget...
Option/alt click = Eye Dropper cursor; sets tool to and matches parameters of element clicked.
Command/ctrl click = Scissors cursor; trim linear segments including walls and polylines (doesn't apply to fills)
Command/ctrl + option/alt click = Syringe cursor; apply (inject) curent default settings to clicked element (combined with option/alt click above turns all your work into a convenient template to pick up and reuse element settings - another feature that beats Revit's version hands down)
2008-06-08 04:18 PM
2008-06-09 04:38 PM
2008-06-09 04:44 PM
2008-06-09 05:04 PM
Shivang wrote:thanks but i don't want to isolate the object (which clicking F5 seems to do) but see it in the context of another view.
Very Simple.
Select the object/element and press F5.
2008-06-09 07:23 PM
2008-06-09 08:55 PM
2008-06-10 09:27 AM
Djordje wrote:... and the double-click... hah! i'm getting the hang of it.
Matthew, you forgot right click. Typical Maccer
2008-06-10 09:35 AM
Peter wrote:that's good to know so i don't waste my time figuring out a way to do it but i'm really quite surprised, i had expected archicad to be able to do anything revit can and more.
greenfin,
Highlighting an element in one elevation will not highlight it in another elevation, although any changes you make will be reflected in all the other elevations when they are updated (ie when you next open/select one).
Only elements modified in the 3D window will automatically update in realtime on to the floor plan (strangely not the opposite!?). None of the other views are linked in realtime. They all require some form of updating to see any changes.
So the answer is no, not really!
2008-06-10 12:50 PM
greenfin wrote:You're going to find there are a lot of things that Revit can do that Archicad cannot.
that's good to know so i don't waste my time figuring out a way to do it but i'm really quite surprised, i had expected archicad to be able to do anything revit can and more.
2008-06-10 01:54 PM
2008-06-10 07:58 PM
Peter wrote:Well, after 13 years ...Djordje wrote:Djordje,
Do yourself a favour, regardless of what the GS marketing tells you:
Switch the Coordinates and Control box on. Tracker off. Windows/Palettes. Place them in the bottom or top of the screen.
Slightly off-topic I know, but why do you recommend this? I've seen it mentioned several times but I've never known the reason why. Personally I've been using ArchiCAD for 18 months, so still a newbie I suppose, but I have never even turned on the co-ordinates & control box. What have I been missing out on all this time?! I seem to get on OK just using the tracker (when it stays on!).
2008-06-10 08:03 PM
greenfin wrote:You don't have to know any of those - in fact, I can bet that most of the people who read that post did not know at least two of them.
i don't really have to know all that, do I. I mean the icons should be somewhere on some menu-, option- or toolbar.
2008-06-10 09:15 PM
Djordje wrote:Thanks for the reply Djordje, I may start a new thread to discuss this further as I am curious as to whether it can help me or not.
Well, after 13 years ...
First, I am used to it. That's a personal reason that bears no objective weight. But - the Tracker can to an extent replace the Coordinate box FOR THE BEGINNER. Not for the user who knows what the small delta buttons mean, how to reposition the origin, what does pressing S do etc ... Much more important is the Control box, with the Special snap points for example. Do you know where they are? I intentionally forgot.
Before anyone mentions the building of my own UI or command palettes - sorry, guys, if you pay for a car, you don't expect a kit. I might tune and tweak it, but it has to work out of the box.
The point is, "old" tools and methods were not OBVIOUS. You had to have someone to show you - but once you know, you fly. The "new" methods are falling over themselves trying to be obvious, and are spectacularly failing to even come close to the "old" ones. The fact that the new users are used to a software that is as friendly as a mad hedgehog with a hangover, and melt at ANY hint of freindlieness (look! a guideline! a bunch of them! wooow!) does not require Archicad to become inelegant, obvious and plain. We should be architect, I seem to recollect?
2008-06-14 05:20 PM
2008-06-14 05:43 PM
2008-06-16 11:07 AM
2008-06-16 02:39 PM
greenfin wrote:Yes.
in archicad?
1. select door
2. to flip left/right, mirror it?
greenfin wrote:Use the Rotate command.
to flip in/out, go to settings and click 'flip'?
2008-06-16 03:09 PM
greenfin wrote:As David says, use Ctrl+E to automatically rotate it 180°. You may or may not then need to use Ctrl+M (mirror) it to flip the hinge side.
editing door/window orientation
...
to flip in/out, go to settings and click 'flip'?
2008-06-17 11:59 AM