In my opinion it would be preferable if the entire revision workflow could be accessed from a single icon on the toolbar: clouding, tagging, and managing. The current interface is not intuitive for those of us that use it infrequently.
There are many aspects of Revision..
Learn the difference between
1. Per Project vs Per Sheet
2. Show - None, Tag, Cloud and Tag ( having a revision cloud would force particular sheet to show the corresponding revision of that cloud )
3. Numbering - Numeric, Alphanumeric, None
4. Numbering Option.
5. and later in the Sheet Block , Revit Families.. check and learn how Revision Properties work and their sorting
For example, you can sort by Revision Number but then it won't follow the Dates, you can sort by Revision Date then it won't follow the Revision number sequence..
6. Once you figure out how Revision works ( Each and every aspect of it ), then you can control the Revision the way you want.. else its always hit and trial...
7. If Revit default revision system doesn't work for you then you can always incorporate Shared parameter and do it all manually.
Thank you for the good information.
At its simplest use, it takes too many clicks. First, select annotation tab, then sketch the revision cloud and accept the sketch, then navigate again to the annotate tab to select the tag.
Some things designers have to learn about Revit, some things Revit programmers need to learn about how designers work. I've been using Revit for years, yet it seems that I still spend most of my effort not in designing buildings but in figuring out how to get Revit to do what I need it to do. The architecture is easy. Endless search for Revit workarounds is hard and consumes a tremendous amount of time.
@CarlMaxey3179 wrote:
Thank you for the good information.
At its simplest use, it takes too many clicks. First, select annotation tab, then sketch the revision cloud and accept the sketch, then navigate again to the annotate tab to select the tag.
Some things designers have to learn about Revit, some things Revit programmers need to learn about how designers work. I've been using Revit for years, yet it seems that I still spend most of my effort not in designing buildings but in figuring out how to get Revit to do what I need it to do. The architecture is easy. Endless search for Revit workarounds is hard and consumes a tremendous amount of time.
Revisions Manager is kept under View tab > Sheet Composition panel is definitely an odd one. I also agree that related tools could be placed in dropdown button, similar to the Keynote button that give you access to all things keynote, including keynote Settings.
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