Hi everybody-
I've been splitting my long profiles using the Split Profile View option on the Elevations tab of the Profile View Properties dialog box. Today I copied the profile view and it copied the profile and view. No labels but it was easy enough to add the labels to the copy. Then I changed the stations and elevations of the original profile view to show the first half of the profile, and I changed the stations and elevations of the copied profile view to show the second half of the profile. The two profiles are still linked. If I select the profile in one profile view, it is selected in both. If I revise the profile in one profile view, it revises the second profile view as well.
I took it a step further and created two copies of the original profile view. I left the original alone and created a first half and second half with the copies. If I revise the original, the copies update.
This seems so much easier to me than the Split Profile View option which makes me suspicious. Does anyone know of any problem with this method? Will my drawing explode in 5 days? I've closed it and reopened it, and the copies are still there with all of their labels and projected objects.
Anybody have any positive or negative experiences with this method?
Thanks so much!
Meredith
C3D 2014 sp2
Windows 7 64 bit
That is how it is supposed to work. A profile can be displayed in any number of profile views (owned by the same alignment that owns the profile) and can be dynamic in all.
I agree that on a small project this is not much of an issue. This could make a very large project very slow. I would think your performance would slowly decrease as the number of profiles and profile views increases.
I think a better approach would be to make a new profile view for each sheet's station range. This will prevent all of the redundant profiles which will speed all C3D regens/calcs/syncs.
John Mayo
ok, very good trick...
I used to cliclk on Create multiple profile views... and each of one can change elevations and station
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