2008-10-17 06:29 AM
2008-10-17 06:33 AM
2008-10-17 10:22 AM
2008-10-17 03:58 PM
2008-10-17 08:24 PM
dmn wrote:It does not. It is all black.
this shows how the image below would look if slabs used priorities.
2008-10-20 04:20 PM
Djordje wrote:Or, if they go through each other, you can use SEOs to cut one out of the other.
Also, implementing the correct modeling techniques (walls should NEVER go through slabs - or any element should not go through any other - which they seem to do on your black squares) would solve most if not all of your problems.
2008-10-20 09:05 PM
Djordje wrote:
It does not. It is all black.
Djordje wrote:I've seen gray backgrounds, I've seen blue ones. I'd love to draft on a white background and use actual lineweights instead of cad colors to draft, but for the moment what actually works, works. How is this relevant to the current discussion? (Redundant question)
I feel that the old drafting ways are embedded too deep in your practice. The black background says so.
Djordje wrote:pardon the quick modeling techniques, I was just trying to show that priorities don't work on slabs.
Also, implementing the correct modeling techniques (walls should NEVER go through slabs - or any element should not go through any other - which they seem to do on your black squares) would solve most if not all of your problems.
Djordje wrote:If I'm used to my drawings making sense to a contractor or a structural engineer, and communicating correctly what I am thinking, then yes.
You don't seem to let ArchiCAD help you, but want to force it to mimic what you are used to.
Djordje wrote:With walls but not slabs or roofs.
Fills of the same materials do join if the model is correct - and elements touch each other instead of crashing though each other.
2008-10-20 09:12 PM
laszlonagy wrote:yes this works as long as all the layers of the operator should all end at the same point in the target, otherwise you need precedences to make a decent looking intersection. I've also tried building the "empty" spot into a complex profile, which I think works best, and results in the "correct image," but is just as backwards as filling and drafting.Djordje wrote:Or, if they go through each other, you can use SEOs to cut one out of the other.
Also, implementing the correct modeling techniques (walls should NEVER go through slabs - or any element should not go through any other - which they seem to do on your black squares) would solve most if not all of your problems.
2008-11-18 07:15 PM
2008-11-18 08:34 PM