Good day everyone.
Could u please tell me if its possible to create running or baseline dimensions in revit as u do in autocad.
Regards,
Aliya
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Good day everyone.
Could u please tell me if its possible to create running or baseline dimensions in revit as u do in autocad.
Regards,
Aliya
Aliya. As with most things in Revit you do it differently to acad. Select all the objects you want to dim first, then set your baseline position.
You can:
Also, dimension spacing can be set in the Dimension Properties, so an overall dimension will 'snap' to a distance away from the running dimension below it.
- Place a single dimension, then modify the dimension by clicking Edit Witness line in the Options bar. After clicking Edit Witness line, click the next item in the string to dimension to.
- Dimension an entire wall at once. Start the dimension tool, look to the Options Bar, and change the settings as you need to dimension openings, grids, walls, etc.
- Dimension running dimensions by clicking. Start Dimension, click first point, then second point, then third, etc until done, then click to set the position of the dimension string.
I'm waiting for the Factory to figure out "Dimension Everything" with one click!
Last edited by Scott Davis; 2005-05-20 at 03:32 PM.
What u have mentioned is, i guess, continuous dimensioning. I also, still wonder how the baseline dimensioning works in Revit.
Any help on this?
Scott D. Brown, AIA
Senior Project Manager | Associate
BECK
Dimension that starts from the same point (baseline)
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Know what i mean ?
Often this is how you measure an existing building i.e. run the tape and read off positions of windows doors etc.
The only way I have been able to do it is to run a stack of dimensions from a common starting point.
It would be nice to have them starting with a dot then having arrowheads pointing in the running direction all on one witness line.
Have I missed something?
Personally baseline dimensioning is something you find in fabrication detailing. A steel angle punched for example where it is important that all the holes are the correct distance from one end only for all pieces (to line up when assembled).
It isn't as relevant or as effective for buildings because of the great distances and numbers of objects involved. It isn't practical to tell a contractor that the window is 85'-6" from the far end of the building when it's only 30'-0" from the near or 4'-0" from the adjacent window?
Not saying you shouldn't use them...to create them with Revit you need to create separate strings and "stack" them up.
Thanx,
Normally Baseline dimensions are done in interior planning So I feel it should be added in revit since its an architectural software and interior is a part of it.
Regards,
Aliya
Ditto
If you want to set out a buliding accurately you run the tape.