2019-01-09 10:15 AM
2019-05-25 05:56 AM
LaszloNagy wrote:
........
AFAIK, it was not re-purposed from Pro Engineer. It was developed by people who previously worked on Solidworks (and maybe Pro Engineer), but it is true, they were much more engineers than architects. And I agree that it really shows in how Revit looks and works.
About isometric vs. perspective: they have made a few improvements in that area so now you can move around in Perspective as well, and there are also several editing operations you can perform there. So it is no longer true that you can only work in Axonometric Views in Revit (it was true a few versions ago).
2019-05-25 06:02 PM
Bricklyne wrote:I have often made the same observation. Revit users seem not to be using Revit only but Revit with add-on software like Sketchup and Autocad ... Revit is incomplete or not adequate enough to force its users to add tools. Archicad users do not use Sketchup or an accompanying 2D drawing tools ... or very anecdotally.
with Revit only coming into the picture once the main design issues have been resolved in those other software.
2019-06-28 05:08 PM
2019-06-28 06:35 PM
stefan wrote:Absolutely as I often say: "The tool does not use" (I hope I have translated well)
Regardless of software, architects should preferably have successful projects. And the software itself does not define this success.