Wishlist | Ability to show Solid operations in plan view

Josh Verran
Advisor

I feel like I'm missing something here, but when you perform a solid operation (for example: cut a flat area out of a sloping site mesh) you can see that affect in all views except plan views.

 

My wish would be to have the ability to show all object accurately in plan, which would include there current shape, not their shape prior to being operated on

 

"plan view is an orthographic projection of a 3-dimensional object from the position of a horizontal plane through the object. In other words, a plan is a section viewed from the top. In such views, the portion of the object above the plane is omitted to reveal what lies beyond. In the case of a floor plan, the roof and upper part of the walls may be left out. Basically, a plan view is just another name for the top view of a 3D object".

 

3D View3D ViewElevationElevationPlanPlanSectionSection

51 Comments
Barry Kelly
Moderator
Things are slowly improving.
We now have shells, roofs and morphs that can show SEO in plan.

If you use the "New 3D Document From Floor Plan" option (right click on plan view) you will get a true top down 3D view that shows SEO on all elements.

Barry.
jferreira
Participant
Agree
Anonymous
Not applicable
yep, everything takes time, it's just a matter of priority.

adding extra/bonus features is okay, fixing the fundamentals is GREAT,
and usually there are cheaper or better alternatives for those extra features on other software, that are already made specifically for those features.(the morph calculation on cut plane is better done in, for example, rh*no + grasshopper, which i used a lot)

and i haven't do a research yet nor dig through the whole forum, but i'd like to ask, how many of us prefer/ask for the 'morph and shell features' above the 'fix the S.E.O. representation on plan'? *just curious

i don't know / don't want to know either, about the base programming / system of archicad.
all i want to is a wall not to be present in a floor plan after i S.E.O.ed it and so on, just as simple as that.
JK88
Contributor

@Josh Verran  I'm assuming that you are trying to show the outline of the cut area on the Plan view right? Usually, I would first create a 2D outline using the line tool on the cut area on the Mesh (Plan view), then after that, select the Mesh (Plan view), then select the Mesh Tool (whilst the mesh object is still been highlighted), after that press & hold the Space bar to activate the Magic Wand, then do a single click right on the 2D outline of the cut area, after a little dialogue box will ask you whether you would like to cut etc, hit ok, then you will be able to see the outline of the cut area. I hope this helps.

Barry Kelly
Moderator

This is a wish many have made - not saying it is a bad wish.

 

As you wrote the plan view is a basically a top view of a 3D object.

This is not quite the case in Archicad.

The plan view is a symbolic top view, not an actual top view.

 

However, try this.

In you plan, right mouse click and choose "New 3D Document From Floor Plan".

Is this closer to what you want?

You can adjust the 3D Document settings to eliminate the colours and just have lines.

I am not saying it will be perfect, but give it a go.

 

Barry.

 

splinter
Contributor

This is a sub-optimal solution and is only viable if dealing with a few instances. The more SEO and "corresponding" 2D linework, the more time-consuming maintenance associated with updating linework as SEO changes.

Erwin Edel
Rockstar

Drag a copy of both the mesh and the operators to the side, select the mesh, right click and 'convert selection to morph(s).

 

If you somehow ended up with more than one morph, select the morphs, right click, boolean operations, union.

 

A morph offers pretty much the same plan and section options as a mesh and gives you the ability to hide edges by selecting them and picking 'hidden'.

 

Always keep your original mesh, incase you need to make changes. Adjusting morphs is very time consuming.

 

Just an alternative work around.

 

You could also relocate to the west of Netherlands where I can just use a slab for terrain, since it is flat 😉

Rico
Booster

Depending on the type of cut, you could use the opening tool, which works on meshes and shows in plan.

Johan Stinckens
Advocate

A lot of replies, but these are all "navigating" past or around the issue at hand, which is clearly an "issue". A "symbolic" view can be an option, but an "actual" top view is a must. Why opt for object-oriented desiging/drawing if we need 2D polylines to make it readable!

 

Are we that "conditioned" that we just think in "work arounds", and are satisfied if we are handed one?!

 

Still truly believe in the power of Archicad, but there's a need for dedication to the product from the development side.

 

Get it in the wish list!

Josh Verran
Advisor

Hi Johan

 

You've hit the nail on the head, some great workarounds and explanations for why we need workarounds, however doesn't really address the shortfalls with the tool/views.

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Upvoted

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