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2013-03-26 04:22 AM - last edited on 2023-05-24 12:48 PM by Rubia Torres
2013-03-28 02:49 AM
blimp wrote:Better get in quick.
I'm planning on purchasing Eric Bobrow's tutorials, but haven't had the chance to get around to it yet
2013-03-28 03:30 AM
2013-03-28 03:40 AM
2013-03-28 03:43 AM
2013-03-30 04:34 AM
2013-03-30 01:06 PM
blimp wrote:If you use this method, the slab will be transformed into an object, and so will act as an object, not a wall: for example you will not be able to put doors or windows into it, and it will not clean up with other walls. Same issues if the slab is transformed into a Morph.
I'm just brain storming here, but if that's the case, would it then be possible to draw the parapet or wall shaped in plan view as a slab, then rotate it to sit vertical and act as a wall with internal wall elements?
2013-03-30 06:21 PM
blimp wrote:Archicad is disciplined so that all forms aren't plastic primitives. Having elements with constraining properties like slab, wall and roof distinguished Archicad from other modelers at the time [1990]. Understanding primitives this way made inserting doors in walls, for instance, revolutionary at the time. As the program evolved and we got away from using steam to run our computers, its designers made increasingly convoluted and complex ways to achieve unlikely form - like your parapet wall challenge. Remember that Archicad isn't merely a modeler, but seeks to logically resolve building elements into quantifiable construction quantities, even if that capacity is beyond most users.
Stuart,
Am I right to saying (and from what I've read from other posts), it seems you can pretty much use any tool to create whatever massing or form your after.
2013-04-01 11:15 PM
would it then be possible to draw the parapet or wall shaped in plan view as a slab, then rotate it to sit vertical and act as a wall with internal wall elements?