Much as the other two replies... it comes down to each of you agreeing on what you will be doing. You can add new elements to the model all day but editing existing elements will require staying out of the other person's way. Also views will let multiple people view the model but as soon as one of you change a property of the view you'll be a borrower of the view and that can impact the other users. Minor visibility changes will cause the other users to get a warning about their changes being temporary but more impactful changes like scale or turning off categories will force you to sync to allow for that to happen.
It is useful to have working views for modeling activities so we can do whatever we need to do to the view to see what we are doing well. The views don't have to persist. For example, I often create a 3D to do thing something specific but then delete it before syncing so it never really existed, for anyone else at least. If I'm working on something for a few days I might keep my own working views around for longer but usually I get rid of them at the end of the day so the model doesn't have unnecessary views.
Using working views means that the documentation views can be edited more freely by someone else because I'm not sharing a view they are working in. However, if I'm putting in walls and doors it's not really practical to expect someone else to be chasing me around the model to tag them in documentation views...at least not until I've made some progress and let them know...sync'd my work.
Revit's worksharing is like a librarian managing the library and no single book can be borrowed by more than one person and everything in the project is a book. Worksets are the shelves that we can associate a book with. That gives us the ability to sort things on to their own shelves like the East or West wings. If we do that then I could take ownership of the entire bookshelf for the East wing so all the model elements would be borrowed along with the shelf. Nobody else would be able to work on those elements until I relinquished them. That would reduce warnings for me but others would bump into me every time they tried to edit something assigned to the East wing's workset.
So it really depends on how well we communicate what each of us should do for the next 15, 30, 60 minutes.
Steve Stafford
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