2013-10-30 10:00 PM
2015-07-10 01:20 AM
2015-07-10 02:51 PM
2015-07-13 10:26 PM
DesignEngineerBIM wrote:How exactly would switching over to parasolid geometry help ArchiCAD?
What are you guys waiting for... First VWs, now allplan 2016 is using parasold..AC please fix up your geometry.
http://www.allplan.com/software/engineering/features-allplan-engineering-2016.html
2015-07-13 10:38 PM
stefan wrote:
It is remarkable that many of the complaints about ArchiCAD are directed at the many parametric objects that are provided in the library.
I believe this marks one of the shortcomings in ArchiCAD's approach: an advanced, but very technical (coding) approach to parametric objects. Highly efficient (small files, large variations in single library objects) but too high-level for most users. As a result, people rely on pre-programmed parametric entities, which are very flexible, but which are useless once you need to tweak them beyond what is provided (and almost impossible to amend or adjust).
So GS is trying to prepare a comprehensive library of very flexible and thus complex objects, which still don't cover enough ground.
Is it a solution to provide a more accessible parametric environment? For some users, it would be perfect. But I assume many regular users would not use that either (too technical, too far away from the traditional design process and sketching).
I'm looking specifically at Dynamo, which was created as a Revit-addon, is Open Source, was taken over by Autodesk and is now being used standalone and in some of their other software offerings. And it is directly inspired by Grasshopper.
So a good visual programming environment seems a very usable solution for this problem. Anyone able to port Dynamo to the ArchiCAD platform? Would a more modern scripting engine around GDL be an alternative solution? E.g. Python or Ruby or javascript or .NET/mono?
E.g. Unity does not provide visual programming, but through C# scripting, many developers created their own visual programming environment! (for materials, for effects, for AI, for overal scripting). I've recently even seen a video course on how to create your own Visual Programming system for Unity. Would be very inspiring for ArchiCAD too.
2015-07-14 09:34 AM
Bricklyne wrote:You can use ArchiCAD fullscreen on Multiple Displays. With the new AC19, the fullscreen on OSX is like a real fullscreen and you can float a tab in the other display.DesignEngineerBIM wrote:How exactly would switching over to parasolid geometry help ArchiCAD?
What are you guys waiting for... First VWs, now allplan 2016 is using parasold..AC please fix up your geometry.
http://www.allplan.com/software/engineering/features-allplan-engineering-2016.html
I do admit that this (below) did catch my eye.....(*drools*)
Just look at all that Monitor screen Real Estate.......
Just look at it and gasp....
...are you seeing this GS?
THIS is how DESIGNERS work!
(*....although I doubt that is specifically parasolid related.)
2015-07-14 10:43 AM
2015-07-14 07:00 PM
stefan wrote:That's OSX. (which has always been the case, I believe)
You can use ArchiCAD fullscreen on Multiple Displays. With the new AC19, the fullscreen on OSX is like a real fullscreen and you can float a tab in the other display.
What is still lacking is the automatic screen update in the second window. It only refreshes when you click in it.
2015-07-14 07:12 PM
nedostizni wrote:I think it's embarrassing (or at least, it's becoming so) when even Vectorworks (a sister program in the Nemetschek fold) can develop their own in-house visual programming interface, but we in ArchiCAD are forced to still have to deal with line coding in GDL.
Vectorworks joins the visual programming domain:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8V6l7zqUG7E
I my modest opinion ArchiCAD would have to follow with similar project.
2015-07-15 01:10 AM
2015-07-15 06:07 PM