can you get an example:
Constantin Stroescu
The polylines are closed save for one overlap (which I found and fixed in revit).
The material I'm looking for should be like this: https://www.bimobject.com/en/roca/product/fyj01fu25
But moreover I just wish revit was more intuitive to use, relying less on experience/trial and error, and more on intuition, the same way autocad or rhino do (in my opinion). Things that seem like they should be simple to do are nothing of the sort. I don't really expect forum members here to have a solution to that haha.
Dude, you're burning way to many brain cells. This took me 15 seconds. It's an OOTB Material Asset.
...there are easily a dozen other ones that match your DWG pattern.
the dwg pattern follows the geography of an area that my project is located in, hence I can't use a pre-made asset for the shape of it. I do however need to find a corten steel material somewhere to paint onto the mass I've made.
How I see your problem and how I think it can be done in a simple way:
https://knowledge.autodesk.com/community/screencast/c7ed08e0-dc38-4c3e-bc28-f832d11a0657
Constantin Stroescu
I'm still trying to figure out what the heck the OP is building that 38788 inches x 4000 inches. Maybe those ROADS, not grout lines. 🤔
One day I tried to fly a helicopter, but since I had never flown a helicopter, I was trying to find the only controls I know, the controls of a car. So the whole experience was a disaster. I think that helicopter was terribly, horribly made. How do they dare to make a helicopter different than a car?
🙄
@tfollisBJKUS wrote:the dwg pattern follows the geography of an area that my project is located in, hence I can't use a pre-made asset for the shape of it. I do however need to find a corten steel material somewhere to paint onto the mass I've made.
Surface Pattern of Material named "Corten Steel" applied to Dome-Shaped Mass using the Paint tool:
@tfollisBJKUS wrote:@barthbradleyThose lines were copy-pasted into that document from another that was using millimetres for its units. I didn't bother checking the units since I expected to be able to scale it in revit anyway.
Also my apologies for the confusion. When I said "the drawing follows the geography" I meant the actual shape of the pattern is traced from maps of the region, not that it's going to be painted onto an uneven surface.
Just teasing, buddy.
Have fun and enjoy the ride.
p.s. and get that emotional support plant. 😉
A masters is not required, a course or some training classes will more than suffice.
You haven't to think now that this can be done in a single way...
No, it can be done in several ways:
In both case you have to import CAD file while in Editing Mode, and pay attention if you have intersecting or not closed lines(you'll have to get rid of them)
https://knowledge.autodesk.com/community/screencast/e49bdb36-43af-49ff-95d2-6a4b114919dd
Constantin Stroescu
I don't have a solution to your specific problems, but in general:
- don't use Revit like AutoCAD.
- Create things natively in Revit whenever possible, don't import or link from other software. It never saves time and creates frustrations.
- there is a learning curve, the more often you use it, the better. Commit to do all designs in Revit. the sooner your brain thinks in BIM, the better.
I am trying to do this particular thing for a while.
also tried 3 different Dxf and one dwf files. always files are not properly importing some of the error are
<<Import Instance has 29616 elements. Imports with more than 10,000 elements cannot be exploded.>>
<< Lines must be in closed loops. The highlighted lines are open on one end.>>
at time 59 seconds
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