Miguel wrote:
Archicad does not have the tools to complete some BASIC drawings without breaking the virtual building...
I guess I'd better tell all the people I work with to stop doing it then!!
To address a few points:
- Yes, the default pen weights are flat-out goofy. They have never made much sense and do not seem to work with any template system I have seen.
- As odd as it may sound, I sometimes think the object libraries included with Archicad are meant to be generic, not specific, so they rely on the user to determine what the options need to be set to (like cabinets and stairs). I have LONG requested a batch-editing tool so that a company/person could set the entire library to the defaults that THEY want and would meet their needs best.
- The cabinets I always felt needed a "schematic" mode of some kind, where you could get a basic cabinet without entering all the information you might later want for actual construction documents. That said, I have not experienced the "off by 13/16" problem you described. Is that in the AC10 library only?
- The schedules are not that hard (I've posted several ways to make easy schedules that are not hard at all). Most people I have taught schedules to were surprised at how easy it was.
- If you use the Section tool for interior elevations, they turn out fine. I wish GS would just dump the IntElev tool instead of pretending it works.
- The shortcuts that come with AC10 are strange, but why would you not just keep the ones from AC9 if you prefer them? The Work Environment will let you import them.
- I make ceiling plans that are part of the virtual building all the time. What about them are you having problems with?
- It takes non-billable time to can upgrade a CAD program (or any major business tool/application) for installation, learning, and upgrading projects. I thought that was a given.
- The object organization has always been weird. I complained about it for a while, then just started using "Object Search" more often.
- Stairs, sadly, have never been great. I'm not sure they match the design methods and building codes anywhere.
There are a lot of things GS could improve upon, even after AC10, but often times a little training goes a long way (which also speaks to the idea of easier program usage and better documentation).
Tom Waltz