@rbarbosa8DQGJ wrote:
They like the old way, the way of Autocad. "Client is the king"...
The client isn't always right nor do they always know what's best especially when it comes to new software, new workflows, new "best practices", or how to use it. They aren't the "experts" when it comes to using the design software and so they need to be educated when it comes to things like this. In my experience, 99.9% of the time they don't care as long as you've made them aware of some of the limitations. What they really care about is. whether the construction documents are accurate and that they don't have to pay for any mistakes or re-work due to a bad design, and they CERTAINLY ARE NOT going to pay for anyone to create a custom family just to show pipes above/below.
@rbarbosa8DQGJ wrote:
The question we made is only to learn a new way to do things that worked every time.
I have nothing against learning new workflows, processes, or trying new ideas. This is how you become better and more efficient.
@rbarbosa8DQGJ wrote:
Every time we need to use a new software, we need to reinvent the wheel to adapt to the new software.
Using new software shouldn't mean you reinvent the wheel. If that's the case then stick with your existing software. This sounds an awful lot like the "this is the way we've always done things" comment.
@rbarbosa8DQGJ wrote:
The right thing shold be the software reproduce consolidated practices, the software should adapt to make existing process better, to make that easy and fast (this is how they sell the new softwares),
And this is exactly what you get if you use the section tools.... a better, faster and easier process to show (in this case) pipes above/below one another.