ā2019-04-19
04:15 PM
- last edited on
ā2022-10-04
02:25 PM
by
Oleksandra Vakariuk
ā2019-04-19 04:34 PM
ā2019-04-19 05:08 PM
ā2019-04-24 04:22 PM
ā2019-04-24 07:11 PM
Mac Studio M4 Max 64GB ram, OS X 10.XX latest
another Moderator
ā2019-04-24 08:13 PM
Hence wrote:I once worked for a firm that did this, too. I never understood what the benefit was of leaving a bunch of deltas floating around in space, not referencing anything in particular. It only cluttered up the sheets.
When we issue new revisions, our standard is to leave the revision Delta and remove the revision cloud.
ā2019-04-24 08:42 PM
ā2019-04-25 09:02 AM
ā2019-04-25 03:49 PM
ā2019-05-09 01:57 PM
Richard wrote:Yes Richard, as a drafter I never understood this workflow, but as a manager I am starting to see the benefit of having a record of "approximately" what changed in each revision. (ie: delta 2 is next to a stair so we must have made the change to the stair in the second revision). I just helps when you're at the end of the project and when everyone gets a little fuzzy on what changes happened when.
Hence wrote:I once worked for a firm that did this, too. I never understood what the benefit was of leaving a bunch of deltas floating around in space, not referencing anything in particular. It only cluttered up the sheets.
When we issue new revisions, our standard is to leave the revision Delta and remove the revision cloud.