Chrisdell wrote:
So, when I open my drawing...
I don't want to sound like a linguistic snob, but for everyone to understand each other, we have to use the same terms...
What you were opening was not a
drawing
, but a
project
.
The Library Manager window lists objects that could not be found, but which had been loaded previously. When you click "Done", if you do not get a report window listing any of these as 'missing', then you can simply go back into Library Manager and delete all of those entries.
The folder called "ArchiCAD Library SE 2008" is hopefully what the Start edition calls its library folder Never seen that one before.
Generally, you shouldn't have individual objects loaded - hence listed one by one - as in your screenshot. When loaded, such things usually appear under the blue 'Other Objects" folder. You can get into this situation by either dragging-and-dropping objects into your project, or by using the "Load Other..." function. Generally, it is a good management practice to have three
folders loaded under Local Libraries: the AC library, an office library, and a project library. Objects that you download or otherwise obtain that you might use in many projects generally go into your Office Library folder tree. Objects/textures/etc that are specific to the given project (such as stairs) go into the Project Library folder.
But, that's a rambling that has nothing to do with your original question...
😉
Karl
One of the forum moderators
AC 28 USA and earlier • macOS Sonoma 14.7.1, MacBook Pro M2 Max 12CPU/30GPU cores, 32GB