Rectangle

Rectangle

Anonymous
Not applicable
2,345 Views
4 Replies
Message 1 of 5

Rectangle

Anonymous
Not applicable

Hi,

Im having a hard time creating a wall with the rectangle command. It seems to me like its something simple I am missing. Im trying to create a rectangle that the measurement from the exterior face to exterior face is 500x300 and the temporary dimensions are only show up from the center. I change the temporary dimension setting to face and it is set to face exterior in the options bar.

The only way I can seem to get it to work is by randomly creating the rectangle then moving the temporary dim to the exterior and changing the size.

 

If you can please help me it would be greaty appreciated.

Thank you

 

0 Likes
Accepted solutions (1)
2,346 Views
4 Replies
Replies (4)
Message 2 of 5

Anonymous
Not applicable

hi. maybe it's the reference planes in the family that lead to this. try to edit the family or creat a new family and draw a reference plane where you want the dimmension line show up, and then make the reference plane a strong one which can set in the property tab. hope help.

0 Likes
Message 3 of 5

Keith_Wilkinson
Advisor
Advisor

Honestly not a command I ever really use but it's the same here.  Once the rectangle (or any other polygon shape) is created the temp dims revert to the intended position as defined by the location line.



"Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day; teach a man to fish and you feed him for a lifetime."
Maimonides
0 Likes
Message 4 of 5

ToanDN
Consultant
Consultant
Accepted solution

Looks like a bug, but minor enough that we just ignore it.

 

If you use line segments to create the walls then the temporary dims are precisely set to your alignment settings.  I either do that or just draw a free rectangle, put some dims on to adjust the size and delete them afterward.  For me it is faster than fiddling with the grips od temporary dims.

0 Likes
Message 5 of 5

RDAOU
Mentor
Mentor

@Anonymous

 

I know this is an old one but I just thought dropping in a note won’t harm

 

The on the go Temp Dimension (A) which you see while drawing the wall are different than Temporary Dimensions (B) which are set after the walls are drawn. What you set in the Temp Dimension Settings are meant for the final Temporary Dimensions (B) which you get after you finish the command and not the ones that show while executing the command (the ones you are referring to in order to control the 500x300 as you draw it)

 

Temporary Dimensions (A) when wall command is envoked

 

This always measure Center to Center irrespective what you check in the Settings or Location Line. As a matter of fact Location Line option has nothing to do with Temp Dimensions.The only difference between a drawing a wall using single line/segment and a rectangle/polygon is that when a wall is drawn using a Line, isolated/not connected to any other identified reference (another wall), the temp dimension looks like as if it is measuring end point to end point. But it is not. If you zoom in and look closely you will see a magenta cross reference of the Temp Dimension. Therefore it appears that it works but as a matter of fact it doesn't. 

 

Temp Dim 2.png

 

In a Rectangle it is easy to see it measuring from the center of the wall and not the faces due to the temp dims observed at the lateral walls.

Temp Dim 1.png

 

The only exception to the above is the full circle (closed ends). Temp Dimension measures in this case center to radius (with respect to either outer or inner face – depending on how you flip it using the space bar not the Location Line option) – Polygons are treated the same as they are inscribed in a circle which you can see while drawing the wall.

 

Temporary Dimensions (B) set after wall command is completed

 

This measure from a reference point to another reference (as long as such reference can be identified). Those settings are only driven by the settings defined in Manage>Temp Dimensions dialog. And the Face option set therein is not specific to Outer Face or Inner Face.

YOUTUBE | BIM | COMPUTATIONAL DESIGN | PARAMETRIC DESIGN | GENERATIVE DESIGN | VISUAL PROGRAMMING
If you find this reply helpful kindly hit the LIKE BUTTON and if applicable please ACCEPT AS SOLUTION


0 Likes