DaleSmith
2012-02-15, 05:04 PM
Hi everyone,
Could someone explain why filtering by material in a view, doesn't seem to be an option? A typical example of this is a steelwork frame where I want to differentiate between two grades of steelwork. If I wanted to show beams of the first steel grade(S275) as a thin blue line and the beams of the second grade(S355) as a bold red line, I would currently have to manually override every piece of steelwork's graphics individually, which is clearly a MAJOR pain and a massive waste of time. Also, if a beam changed steel grade, I would have to go back and change it's graphic overrides in this view manually once again.
The only real reason I can think is maybe because some elements don't have a single material type, adding confusion.
Can someone offer a more suitable work around than manually selecting, checkling, then changing every single element's graphics override indivdually?
I always thought a 'quick select' option (similar to the one AutoCAD uses) should have been an important inclusion in Revit. At least that way I could select all beams in a view, and then quickly filter my selection to all beams with the grading type I required, before manually amending their graphics.
It just seems strange that Revit has the ability to filter my view to provide a visual indication that pieces of structural framing have slightly different Cross-section rotations, numbers of studs, or even manufacturers, but not what the things are actually made out of :)
Could someone explain why filtering by material in a view, doesn't seem to be an option? A typical example of this is a steelwork frame where I want to differentiate between two grades of steelwork. If I wanted to show beams of the first steel grade(S275) as a thin blue line and the beams of the second grade(S355) as a bold red line, I would currently have to manually override every piece of steelwork's graphics individually, which is clearly a MAJOR pain and a massive waste of time. Also, if a beam changed steel grade, I would have to go back and change it's graphic overrides in this view manually once again.
The only real reason I can think is maybe because some elements don't have a single material type, adding confusion.
Can someone offer a more suitable work around than manually selecting, checkling, then changing every single element's graphics override indivdually?
I always thought a 'quick select' option (similar to the one AutoCAD uses) should have been an important inclusion in Revit. At least that way I could select all beams in a view, and then quickly filter my selection to all beams with the grading type I required, before manually amending their graphics.
It just seems strange that Revit has the ability to filter my view to provide a visual indication that pieces of structural framing have slightly different Cross-section rotations, numbers of studs, or even manufacturers, but not what the things are actually made out of :)