carlom82
Guest
Hello everyone,
I am a semi-neophyte of revit and I still can't understand some mechanisms that I hope you can explain to me. . .
- the biggest "problem" consists in creating dozens and dozens of blocks all identical with progressive names.for example in revit I have a type of door that exporting to autocad becomes a block. the antipathic thing is that the same door repeated 30 times in a plane creates me 30 different blocks making it practically impossible to change. Is there a way to create a single block?
- for the shadows I have already understood that revit does not export them in vector format but I would like to understand if the colored retini that I see in the brochures I can find them somehow in autocad...otherments I can do as it suggested a user that print in jpg format both colors and shadows and then place the jpg behind the design...macchinoso but effective. . .
I know that I could avoid these two problems by directly setting the tables in revit but I still can't produce a model that is 100% correct and many small size changes I have to do with autocad...I don't think that in revit there is the possibility to correct "hand" of the lines in the layouts. .
Thank you for the answers!
Hello everyone!! !
I am a semi-neophyte of revit and I still can't understand some mechanisms that I hope you can explain to me. . .
- the biggest "problem" consists in creating dozens and dozens of blocks all identical with progressive names.for example in revit I have a type of door that exporting to autocad becomes a block. the antipathic thing is that the same door repeated 30 times in a plane creates me 30 different blocks making it practically impossible to change. Is there a way to create a single block?
- for the shadows I have already understood that revit does not export them in vector format but I would like to understand if the colored retini that I see in the brochures I can find them somehow in autocad...otherments I can do as it suggested a user that print in jpg format both colors and shadows and then place the jpg behind the design...macchinoso but effective. . .
I know that I could avoid these two problems by directly setting the tables in revit but I still can't produce a model that is 100% correct and many small size changes I have to do with autocad...I don't think that in revit there is the possibility to correct "hand" of the lines in the layouts. .
Thank you for the answers!
Hello everyone!! !