2008-12-17 05:21 PM - last edited on 2023-05-26 03:26 PM by Rubia Torres
2008-12-17 11:14 PM
2008-12-22 06:36 PM
You should add a Signature to your Profile (click the Profile button near the top of this page) with your ArchiCAD version and operating system (see mine for an example) for more accurate help in this forum.Thanks for the suggestion David.
Not exactly sure what you are trying to accomplishWhat I'm trying to do...I'm almost sure its not an option. I have looked at the Consolidation tools...but thanks for the tip.
2008-12-22 06:56 PM
Designr wrote:Arrr. There be dragons there...
I am also trying to created a structured fill type list and line type list that is concise...getting rid of all the fills we do not use or are duplicates of some sort. I have created a worksheet that has all the fills and another with all the line types we want to keep so that I can perform a purge and not lose anything we want to keep.
2008-12-22 07:39 PM
To avoid dragons, it is really essential that you not purge any linetypes or fills that might be used in any library parts (you'll end up with 'missing') - and moreover that you never create a new linetype or fill (or material, etc) at the same INDEX number - because then the library part - or the detail - will reference something entirely different.The pesky fills that bother me most are the ones Autocad creates when importing details. I have no problem with my conscience when deleting these...I just want to know where they are hiding at (line types, likewise).
2008-12-23 04:47 AM
Designr wrote:You're welcome.
One more Question!! The indexing numbers....
Once I have gotten rid of all the imported fills/lines that have no value to archicad, how do I eliminate the large gap in index numbers. Ex: the indexed archicad used #s(1-say 40) then all the deleted ones and then ones I have created way over in the 1&200s ...1,2 skip a few 99,100? Can I get rid of the gap in numbers, or should I just not even care?
2008-12-23 04:24 PM
Here's a trick: create a dummy attribute at index 200 (300? 400?) for each attribute and name it z-unused or something like that so that the name is sorted to the bottom of every list. Then, when you append your own attributes, they will all be in a number range above that - easily identified, and likely not to conflict with the default attributes of some future version of ArchiCAD.Furthermore, moving all my new/created attributes to higher indexes to make room for future versions is far more more forward thinking than I would have done and will be a life saver down the road.
2008-12-23 08:40 PM