Different visibility for same view

Different visibility for same view

dgoff96
Enthusiast Enthusiast
638 Views
6 Replies
Message 1 of 7

Different visibility for same view

dgoff96
Enthusiast
Enthusiast

What is the best way to show one view with several different visibility settings (ie, full elevation, sheating removed, structure only) I've currently duplicated the view and then hidden the marker for the dupliates but seems clunky.

0 Likes
639 Views
6 Replies
Replies (6)
Message 2 of 7

constantin.stroescu
Mentor
Mentor

I use , for this purpose, View Templates.

Constantin Stroescu

EESignature

0 Likes
Message 3 of 7

dgoff96
Enthusiast
Enthusiast

Hi Constantin, 

 

I have view templates for each version i want, but do I still have to duplicate the views? Is there a way to apply a multiple view templates to a view and choose depending on what you want?

0 Likes
Message 4 of 7

constantin.stroescu
Mentor
Mentor

I'm not sure I understood you well, but if you want to make a study with several different settings including materials , maybe Design Options can be a solution....

Constantin Stroescu

EESignature

0 Likes
Message 5 of 7

chrisplyler
Mentor
Mentor

If you only need one view and you want to change it as you see fit, then just re-apply whatever view template is appropriate at the time.

 

If you need several versions of the view on sheets permanently, then duplicate the view however many times you need, and apply the appropriate view template to each one, and change their disciplines if appropriate.

 

I don't know what you mean by, "...hidden the marker for the duplicate." Duplicating a view does not create any kind of "marker."

 

0 Likes
Message 6 of 7

David_W_Koch
Mentor
Mentor

@chrisplyler wrote:

If you only need one view and you want to change it as you see fit, then just re-apply whatever view template is appropriate at the time.

 

If you need several versions of the view on sheets permanently, then duplicate the view however many times you need, and apply the appropriate view template to each one, and change their disciplines if appropriate.

 

I don't know what you mean by, "...hidden the marker for the duplicate." Duplicating a view does not create any kind of "marker."

 


Duplicating an elevation creates another elevation callout for the duplicated elevation.  I believe this is what the OP means by "marker".


David Koch
AutoCAD Architecture and Revit User
Blog | LinkedIn
EESignature

0 Likes
Message 7 of 7

dgoff96
Enthusiast
Enthusiast

Yes David, I was referring to the duplicated callout when I said marker. I just assigned the ones I wanted to hide a different callout type and applied a filter to the view to hide them. Thanks for the help!

0 Likes