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steven-g
en respuesta a: Anonymous

It all depends on where you start from, I have used Autocad for many years, and I attended an evening course for both Inventor and Revit, give me Autocad anyday WYSIWYG (WhatYouSeeIsWhatYouGet), why on earth would you want planes and sketches and extrusion that become yet more planes then a parameter manager then a family manager then a group then off to the vault, you need a dozen screens just to keep track of all the different dialogues and toolpalettes.

I want a line I type "l" and it's ready to go and I can place the end anywhere I want right now without having to think if I'm in the correct editor or can draw the other end just there without having to try and hunt down some little known icon on a wierd tab on the ribbon that changes it's contents every two seconds depending on what it feels like and what someone else thinks I am trying to do - yes I do want that point just there and I don't want to waste time telling the program why I should be allowed to do that.

 

Or you could just realise that it is a different approach to the workflow of producing the same thing, but indeed some tools are quicker at doing that than others.