want to detect and remove unused objects only
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ā2010-11-23 02:21 PM
I wish, There should be a facility from Graphisoft to purge unused objects.
Upto AC 22
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ā2010-11-23 06:13 PM
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ā2010-11-23 07:03 PM
If unused embedded objects are there , will they be included into Archive ?
Upto AC 22
iMacs and MacBookPros: Mac OS X (10.6 to 10.12, Intel core 2 Quad to i5, i7, 8 GB to 16GB)
Win 10, AMD Opteron 6-Core x 2, 16GB, FirePro W4100 2GB
& ThinkPad E550
& i7, 8GB
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ā2010-11-23 07:15 PM
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ā2010-11-23 07:18 PM
qwsoftdraw wrote:yes, finally that is the way. Thank you.
Another way to do what you're wanting is to go into your Library Manager and delete the GDL objects listed. Close Archicad, then come back in. It will look for only the objects that are in your Archicad drawing.
Upto AC 22
iMacs and MacBookPros: Mac OS X (10.6 to 10.12, Intel core 2 Quad to i5, i7, 8 GB to 16GB)
Win 10, AMD Opteron 6-Core x 2, 16GB, FirePro W4100 2GB
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ā2011-02-17 09:32 PM
The safest way I have found so far is by using the ArchiCAD 14 new Library Manager features.
1. Firstly make sure there are no missing objects, macros etc which can generally be achieved by loading all libraries that were used in the project.
2. Export all the used objects to an external folder.
3. Remove all Linked libraries.
4. Embed all the exported parts by manually locating them in the external folder.
5. Reload & Apply the changes.
This method is not 100% foolproof but it is definitely the safest method I've found, especially if the libraries were well organized in the first place. I'm always looking for better ways and deeper insight so comments are welcome!
Cheers,
Link.
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ā2011-02-17 11:58 PM
In the library manager there is a button for "embed placed objects from selected library". This will embed all the used objects (along with their macros) - and get rid of the linked library.
After this, you can choose to export those embedded objects to a linked library, if you will. Or you can keep them embedded - If you select an object in the embedded library, (in the library manager) the library manager will tell you how many instances are placed in the project. Therefore you can remove objects that you no longer use too.
Read this article:
http://archicadwiki.com/LibraryMigration
VP, Customer Success, Graphisoft

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ā2011-02-18 01:47 AM
gkmethy wrote:Hey Greg
This is really simple to do in ArchiCAD 14:
In the library manager there is a button for "embed placed objects from selected library". This will embed all the used objects (along with their macros) - and get rid of the linked library.
After this, you can choose to export those embedded objects to a linked library, if you will. Or you can keep them embedded - If you select an object in the embedded library, (in the library manager) the library manager will tell you how many instances are placed in the project. Therefore you can remove objects that you no longer use too.
Read this article:
http://archicadwiki.com/LibraryMigration
Thanks for correcting me. I was going by memory and got the order wrong. That will teach me for posting before my morning coffee. I should have written embed>export>re-embed. And I do like to export out and re-embed manually, purely because I don't like subfolders in my embedded library. I should mention that, even though it's not a necessary step.
The Library Manager does not show macros, textures, property objects, and UI images as placed - correct? Deleting those as suggested could cause confusion when parts stop working or appearing correctly, no? I presume that's why they embed to folders called 'Object parts (do not modify)' and' Textures, zone stamps and property objects'.
I wish instead that non-placeable parts were shown in italic, much like the 'embedded' attributes display in the Attribute Manager. This way it would be easier to know what to leave the hell alone.
Better still is if all
It's mentioned in your article and elsewhere that linking libraries reduces file size and saves loading time. I can see how it may bloat your file a
Apart from embedded library parts appearing as duplicates in multiple hotlinks, I haven't seen any significant hit in terms of performance or methodology in using embedded libraries & server libraries only.
And unless I am imagining things, embedded parts are better to use because if they are copy/pasted into another project (that doesn't currently have that part loaded) it will automatically become embedded in that project, textures, macros, ui images, et al, all automatically included!!! That can't be said for linked or even server libraries!(?)
I'm obviously quite interested in this topic and your response.
Cheers,
Link.
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ā2011-02-18 07:31 PM
Are you suggesting that embedding is best and don't bother with the pla.
Or, embed and then save as pla.
Richard
Dunedin, New Zealand.
Imac 27" i9 3.6GHz; 32GB Ram Mac OS 11.3
Archicad V23:V24

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ā2011-02-21 05:50 AM
Well I really hope Greg replies as I'm certain he'd know more details than I do.
Maybe I've been burnt too often, but I just don't trust that saving a PLA will capture absolutely everything. I am sure saving an archive has come a long way, but even in ArchiCAD 14 I still get the dreaded (and frustratingly vague) 'Cannot find some library parts or internal macros' warning.
So until I am advised otherwise (perhaps embedded has the same problem but not the warning?), I am sticking with the embedded method. I am doing this even to migrate our current projects from ArchiCAD 13 to ArchiCAD 14 on our BIM Server.
Cheers,
Link.