2008-01-07 01:25 AM
2008-01-07 02:50 AM
2008-01-07 03:14 AM
2008-01-07 07:07 PM
2008-01-07 08:08 PM
2008-01-07 08:16 PM
Rakela wrote:HERE
please do a search....there is a trick with glass/transparency i think..
2008-01-07 08:25 PM
2008-01-08 10:18 PM
map adjoining property with glass material and turn Transparency in Shading ON in 3D window settings. Put section behind the adjoining property (so you will see the elevation of your building through). Then unlink the section and delete all undesired lines.So... I take it that I should change all of the material of building A to glass and then put the section line behind it ?
2008-01-08 10:56 PM
New_Xieland wrote:Turn Transparency ON, but this will of course affect Building B also. And won't you still get outlines of Building A elements if the section line is beyond it?
Thanks for the replies and links guys
But I'm still a little confused about the work around process in using glass.
map adjoining property with glass material and turn Transparency in Shading ON in 3D window settings. Put section behind the adjoining property (so you will see the elevation of your building through). Then unlink the section and delete all undesired lines.So... I take it that I should change all of the material of building A to glass and then put the section line behind it ?
But if I do that, even if the material is glass, in section it'll just become opaque....
I guess it'll work if you render a sectional view in the 3D engine although you can't exactly render at a particular scale.
Hmmmmm....
2008-01-10 11:42 PM