How is layout viewport transparency controlled? The illustration under the Help topic "About Layout Viewports" shows two overlapping viewports that are mutually transparent. That's exactly what I want. BUT, in my system, overlapping layout viewports are mutually opaque by default and I cannot figure out how to change that, AND all the discussions I am able to Google up are complaints that overlapping layout viewports are transparent and everyone is trying to figure out how to make them opaque, with WIPEOUTs or whatever ... very frustrating!
How do I get transparent overlapping layout viewports? I am using Civil 3D 2014.
Many thanks for any help you can provide.
Solved! Go to Solution.
Solved by rkmcswain. Go to Solution.
Solved by neilyj666. Go to Solution.
neilyj (No connection with Autodesk other than using the products in the real world)
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HI Neilyj, thanks for your reply. In the attached screenshot, Viewport 1 is obscuring the object in viewport 2 (even tho the border of Viewport 2 can be seen). I'd like Viewport 1 to be transparent so the green object in Viewport 2 can be seen thru it, aligned with the outlined object in Viewport 1.
If you check the illustration in the HELP topic mentioned above, you can see an example of (what I think is) exactly that.
Thanks for any help you can provide.
This seem to arise if you have the visual style set to Realistic
If you swap the visual styles in the viewports then it works
There may be a far slicker way of doing this but I don't know of it...:)
neilyj (No connection with Autodesk other than using the products in the real world)
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For me, they are both "transparent" as long as they are both set to 2D Wireframe.
If I change one viewport to any type of shading (such as Conceptual, or Xray), that viewport now obscures objects in another viewport.
neilyj (No connection with Autodesk other than using the products in the real world)
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Hello rkmcswain,,, Yes, that seems to be the deal. If there's any way to get around that, it would be wonderful to discover it.
The whole idea here, which I didn't really explain, is to get different renderings of the various parts of an assembly, e.g. the important parts in Realistic rendering and the supporting parts in Hidden wireframe (or some such combination of renderings). The simple problem stated above resulted from trying to do that with overlapping viewports.
Is there a more straight-forward way of accomplishing mutiple renderings on an object-by-object basis? If so, that's where I really need to be.
Thanks for your help, and thanks again also to neilyj.
One additional encouraging observation: The objects in the overlapping viewports in the HELP illustration are apparently rendered in HIDDEN style, unless they were just dummied-up somehow for the sake of the illustration (which I doubt), or maybe the illustration was done with a prior version when things might have been different ...?
Anyway, that leads me to believe there MIGHT be a way to do it ...
So did anyone ever find a work around for this issue?
I'm having the same problem. I need the viewports to be in Realistic Mode, and I need for the 2 viewports to have transparent backgrounds. Why is that so hard for AutoCAD to do? Is there not a feature to just turn the friggin background of the viewport OFF? grrrrrr
What good is it to have a Realistic Option in teh viewports and then limit how it's used?!?!
One workaround would be to use polygonal viewports.
That is really just so dumb. I wonder why Autocad decided to make it's users work extra hard to use their "nifty" features? Ridiculous. Thanks for adding even more time to my paperspace setup time AutoCAD. Such a waste, it may seem like nothing, but when you have 14 -20 pages to set up with multiple object son each page .. thats about another hour+ worth of work.
so frustrating.
especialyl when the veiwports used to have transparant backgrounds regardless of the type they were.
Not too old of a topic to bring back, but I've run into this same issue, though in ACAD Arch.
What I've found, resides in the Visual Styles Manager. Select any Visual Style, then go to Edge Settings -> Show -> Isolines and this will make your viewport transparent.
If you have Edge Settings -> Show -> Facet Edges or None then you will have an opaque viewport.
Hello,
It is perhaps an old topic but in case of someone is still searching for it I think I find a good tips.
In order to have no background for a viewport in a shaded view you can open the Visual Style manager (_VISUALSTYLES) and then paste and copy the style you would like to use in a viewport and which have a non transparent background. Then select the new Visual Style you just create. In the visual style properties set "Backgrounds" to "Off" instead of "On" in the Environment Settings part.
Then all viewport using this visual style will be transparent.
I hope it could help someone.
Regards.
Emmanuel.
autocad seems to create for more kluster f ckin with more crap to confuse users
and no help
This option works
but you missed many steps
go to model space
type in visual styles
when the pop up window opens
select 2d wireframe
right click I that window
and select "apply to all viewports"
type regen
you should see your paperspace dimesions and text NOT covered up by the vport window
next time folk STOP WASTING PEOPLES TIME
with NON ISSUES other than the QUESTION ASKED
or incomplete Intructions to solve an issue
THATS INCOMPETANT AUTOCAD JOBS TO CONFUSE users
user since autocad ver 2.6
Dude, chill. E-BIM's solution works, as do a few others previously posted.
Yours, however, changes the visual style to wireframe; not everyone wants to see wireframe.
Chill out and read a bit more.
A quick work-around,
A quick work-around,