2006-10-31 10:08 PM
2006-11-01 07:37 PM
2006-11-03 07:04 PM
2006-11-03 07:08 PM
junior wrote:As long as you did not "Sign out" before you left the office, you are fine. Archicad gets (understandably) paranoid if it cannot find the PLP to verify that you are currently signed in.
Alright, I brought home the .plc file last night. Here's my concern....when I open my plc file (at home)...AC is trying to locate my plp file (which is at work)? What should do at this point?
...I wouldnt want to risk continuing working on the .plc file by ignoring to locate the plp and then finding out the next day at work that I cant send and recieve. I need some illumination on this particular case
2006-11-04 12:28 AM
TomWaltz wrote:Yes another one of the paranoid messages you get with Teamwork. Since one of the main purposes of a PLC file is to work away from the PLP file, this message should be toned down to say something like. "The PLP file cannot be located but if you are working remotely it will automatically connect next time you are on the PLP file's network"
As long as you did not "Sign out" before you left the office, you are fine. Archicad gets (understandably) paranoid if it cannot find the PLP to verify that you are currently signed in.
2006-11-04 01:23 AM
Aussie wrote:Yeah...I'd feel alot better if it said something more positive like that, hahaha. Time to get a psychologist on board GS
Yes another one of the paranoid messages you get with Teamwork. Since one of the main purposes of a PLC file is to work away from the PLP file, this message should be toned down to say something like. "The PLP file cannot be located but if you are working remotely it will automatically connect next time you are on the PLP file's network"
2006-11-18 01:04 PM
Just to clarify (for me), you mean I should leave the .plp file opened at work even after saving a .pca or .plc version in order for the 'send and recieve' function to work properly the next day after changing things at home?Just to remove a misconception here, you can't ever "open" or "leave open" a .plp file. You can only sign in or out, or send and receive changes. Consider it a kind of database. At the point you sign-in to the .plp, you are in fact in the .plc environment and it should always be saved as such. (I also have the backup option switched on, just in case)
Or did I confuse myself here?
2006-11-18 05:05 PM
Nick wrote:Well... technically the PLP is open for read/write operations during sign in/out and send/receive operations, which is why only one person can be doing this at a time. It does not act like a multi-user transactional database with active record locking etc.Junior wrote:Just to remove a misconception here, you can't ever "open" or "leave open" a .plp file. You can only sign in or out, or send and receive changes. Consider it a kind of database. At the point you sign-in to the .plp, you are in fact in the .plc environment and it should always be saved as such. (I also have the backup option switched on, just in case)
Just to clarify (for me), you mean I should leave the .plp file opened at work even after saving a .pca or .plc version in order for the 'send and recieve' function to work properly the next day after changing things at home?
Or did I confuse myself here?
2006-12-14 07:00 PM
2006-12-15 04:59 AM