MikeJarosz
2013-04-04, 02:10 PM
Dear AUGI:
I am interested in your thoughts on sheet creation. There's more than one way, and recently I had a discussion with someone who does it differently.
I have always made sheets using duplicate with detailing. (DWD) I keep my main model clean of notation, then DWD, place the dupe view on a sheet, and do my notation there with activate view. DWD is not a dead copy. If I add a model object such as a wall in the dupe view, it appears in the main view, as there is only one place to store an object, namely, the main model. Likewise, an object added to the main model appears in the dupe view, even after it was duplicated.
Notation is a different story. Notation is mostly view dependent. By adding notation to the dupe view it stays there and I keep my main model clean. Therefore, I can do things like masking regions that stay in the dupe and don't mess up my main model.
A colleague at another firm has another way of doing things. He uses duplicate dependent. He then creates scope boxes and binds them to the dupe view. This syncs the crop region to the scope box. This dependent view is then placed on the sheet. I experimented with this technique and discovered several things. Adding a masking region to the dupe view also added it to the main model, not a desirable result. Then, I turned off color fill in the dupe, and color fill went off in the main model. Both of these things I can do using DWD, without messing up the main model.
I added a couple sheets done this way to a live project and watched what happened to them over several days. What I found is that as my team worked on the main model, the sheets were constantly changing appearance. The duplicate-view-as-dependent appears to defeat the benefits of view dependent settings. Either I missed a step in the sheet creation with dependent views, or this way of doing things is not for large projects with large drawings sets and a team of 8 banging away at the model.
Do I understand this correctly? Any thoughts?
Yours as always,
MJ
I am interested in your thoughts on sheet creation. There's more than one way, and recently I had a discussion with someone who does it differently.
I have always made sheets using duplicate with detailing. (DWD) I keep my main model clean of notation, then DWD, place the dupe view on a sheet, and do my notation there with activate view. DWD is not a dead copy. If I add a model object such as a wall in the dupe view, it appears in the main view, as there is only one place to store an object, namely, the main model. Likewise, an object added to the main model appears in the dupe view, even after it was duplicated.
Notation is a different story. Notation is mostly view dependent. By adding notation to the dupe view it stays there and I keep my main model clean. Therefore, I can do things like masking regions that stay in the dupe and don't mess up my main model.
A colleague at another firm has another way of doing things. He uses duplicate dependent. He then creates scope boxes and binds them to the dupe view. This syncs the crop region to the scope box. This dependent view is then placed on the sheet. I experimented with this technique and discovered several things. Adding a masking region to the dupe view also added it to the main model, not a desirable result. Then, I turned off color fill in the dupe, and color fill went off in the main model. Both of these things I can do using DWD, without messing up the main model.
I added a couple sheets done this way to a live project and watched what happened to them over several days. What I found is that as my team worked on the main model, the sheets were constantly changing appearance. The duplicate-view-as-dependent appears to defeat the benefits of view dependent settings. Either I missed a step in the sheet creation with dependent views, or this way of doing things is not for large projects with large drawings sets and a team of 8 banging away at the model.
Do I understand this correctly? Any thoughts?
Yours as always,
MJ