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Enthusiast
Enthusiast

@Kitty.Ma I will have at least 3-4 different views open that are focused on a specific area/item, at the same time, in order to see how the changes that I'm making look from different views. Typically, this is a plan view, elevation view, section view, and a 3D view, but it could be other views as well (different 3D angles or multiple plan views if the change is affecting multiple floors). A lot of times, I am building custom families or modelling masses, etc.  

Your first and last question are basically concerning the same issue and that is the issue of convenience and flexibility. I have minimized the windows because it is easier to re-open (maximize) them then it is to search them through the project browser, at least in previous versions of Revit. Searching through the project browser is more time consuming because it sometimes involves going through 1000+ views in a project and this will ALWAYS take longer than just clicking on a "maximize" button in a window that is already in your bottom left corner (that's the locations where all the previous versions or Revit stored minimized windows). Time spent searching through the project browser isn't very long, but over the course of a day and opening and closing different views 100+ times in a day it adds up, and it adds up in frustration even faster. 

What I don't understand is why did Autodesk decide to remove the minimize/maximize feature in the first place? Did users complain about this feature? Was this creating conflicts with other UI tools in Revit? Is it impossible to have the new TAB feature from Revit 2019, as well as the old,  minimize/maximize feature available at the same time? Thanks.