I know how to create the levels but not the diferente floor plans correspondente. No views correspondente plans when I click on these levels. Draw the first floor(ground floor for example) is ok but the followind, I am lost. In AutoCad it is so easy!
@Anonymous wrote:In AutoCad it is so easy!
It is in Revit also!
@Anonymous wrote:I know how to create the levels but not the diferente floor plans correspondente.
Go to the view tab and click on plan views.
@Anonymous wrote:I am lost.
Got Google?
I remember back in the day when I was learning AutoCAD -- before there was Google. I had to walk to the library -- through the snow and uphill (in both directions) -- and hunt for the information I needed. Back then, that was no easy task. You needed to know the Dewey Decimal System or you would be lost.
Hi @Anonymous
Please check this screen cast ![]()
https://knowledge.autodesk.com/community/screencast/050c119b-b586-483f-b75f-a0fb5641a30a
050c119b-b586-483f-b75f-a0fb5641a30a
you can refer to this Autodesk Academy some tutorials. thanks
@barthbradley wrote:
I remember back in the day when I was learning AutoCAD -- before there was Google. I had to walk to the library -- through the snow and uphill (in both directions) -- and hunt for the information I needed. Back then, that was no easy task. You needed to know the Dewey Decimal System or you would be lost.
You had it worse than I did. I had the AutoCAD reference book and shared my dial up internet connection with the fax line.
@RobDraw wrote:
shared my dial up internet connection with the fax line.
That is reality right there. And we only had one account, so if you needed something you had to ask the one person in the office who had the computer with the internet on it.
only you could walk uphill in both directions....
I took a crash course (meaning ...I crashed hard) in AutoCAD when my engineer handed me a AutoCAD2002 CD and said, "no more pencil for you". Then I began to learn Revit when I updated my computer and AutoCAD 2002 would not run on Windows 10. You have to understand that its a different mindset. AutoCAD works just like pencil on paper... you draw lines on a surface. In Revit you arent really drawing, you are building. In CAD, when you place a wall on the page, all you did was draw a line. Only you know that it was a wall. In Revit, when you place a wall, you actually put a wall into the model, and that wall has characteristics like height and thickness, and components. Choose your walls carefully.
When you view your first floor plan, you can see your walls... when you view your second floor plan, you wont see your first floor walls...they are beyond your view range. If you want to be able to see them you can either draw reference planes(while in your first floor view) that will show through all of your levels, or you can adjust your "view range" at you second floor to see through to the lower walls. If you're new to revit, it might be easier to use the reference planes. Take you learning one step at a time. Playing around with view range can be confusing.
Hope this is helpful... it may not be the prescribed path to get where youre going, but I never took those paths, sort of learned on my own and with the help of all these guys that posted in your thread.
It's a mindset, once you see it... you wont want to go back to CAD
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