2010-07-28 07:21 PM - last edited on 2023-05-24 12:38 PM by Rubia Torres
2010-07-28 08:20 PM
2010-07-28 10:32 PM
ksymons19 wrote:Dealing with WALLHOLE is the fairly old (prior to 5 or so years ago) way of doing this. What you want is to include a slab for which you set the ID field to be "wallhole". Be sure only one slab in your assembly has that ID (and if so, that none have the alternative id of "wallniche").
I created a custom gothic window with terracotta trim on the exterior side. I'm familiar with copying and pasting parameters for the WALLHOLE function and cleaning up my 2D symbol.
2010-07-28 11:06 PM
2010-07-29 02:09 AM
ksymons19 wrote:Yes - it makes the assembly a niche rather than a window/door. The wallhole always cuts through the entire width of the wall, even if the wallhole slab is 1 cm thick and the wall is 50 cm thick. The wallniche removes part of the wall to allow creating objects similar to the niche elements in the library.
Wow, that's an improvement so users don't have to fiddle around with GDL coding. I guess I missed it from being in a Revit firm for a couple years before finding an ArchiCAD firm last year.
Does WALLNICHE in the ID do anything?
2010-07-29 09:51 PM
2011-10-06 07:33 PM
2011-10-06 08:34 PM
2011-10-06 09:30 PM
2011-10-07 01:05 AM
Matthew wrote:This thread is about non-scripted windows/doors.
If you are doing a fully custom, parametric window it's best to keep "A" as the rough opening width and script the details as they should be shown (the wall attributes are available as globals to get the right lines and fills).
Of course for one offs it's usually best to just tweak the symbol.