@jachiribogaPYZFP wrote:
Joe-Bouza
Thanks that works...
Yes, I am using an NCS dwt file. I'm fairly certain its the default file that installed with Civil3D. By your statement I am assuming that .dwt is not the only template option. Can you direct me to some good reading material that would inform me what other (other than .dwt) template options exist and what the good and bad of the options are.
I am glad that I posed this question. Not what I expected, I have gained a marginally better understanding of what or rather why these layers exist. Civil3D uses these layers when inserting objects and is not something I should just blindly hit "Control - A - Delete" on.
My goals with are
- Don't Work in a mess:
- Starting with 200+ layers with no objects, no grouping, no filtering is a mess
- Make everything legible and understandable
- Layer naming convention is mostly illegible. Example "C-HYDR-CTCH-FPTH", must clearly mean Sea Hydraulic Catchment FoolTherapy and then I look at the description to learn what it is and of course its null. Thankfully we have saved the world from letters necessary for clear communication.
If I rename layers and/or add layers to filter groups and/or add descriptions, am I at risk of breaking any programmatic refences to that layer. (I write enough code to understand that it should have been coded to let me do this but should and was are two different things)
You are spot on about maintaining a rigorous layer naming convention. Is there a good built in tool to do this? Or would this be API? Or creating templates with tons of layers?
Thank you
I really do appreciate the response
As stated earlier, you really need to take some basic C3D courses or view intro to C3D videos online. What you're asking about is really template management and layer management, but you need to know how you plan on using C3D in order to setup the templates. I personally use around five starting templates depending on what the drawing is going to contain and those templates are based on the major C3D object types (one for alignments/profiles, one for surfaces, one for corridors, one for survey, one for pipe/pressure networks, etc.). It also helps keeps the layers from getting out of control like the OOTB templates have.
The OOTB template layers are based on the National CAD Standard, which is something else you might want to look into to understand why these start with "C" and the four characters are used for the major and minor descriptors.
C3D 2024-2026
Windows 11
32GB RAM