I'm working in Revit 2021 and I can't get the masking region to mask the architectural background. In this snip you can see that it masks the floor boxes just south of the line but does not mask the architectural walls, furniture, etc.
I have many views using this power plan template and the other views have no issues with masking regions. The view template sets the visual style to Hidden Line and the transparency of detail items to 0. There is just this one view that somehow has different properties. I have tried copying a working masking region from a different power plan view into this view and it no longer works.
I'm working in Revit 2021 and I can't get the masking region to mask the architectural background. In this snip you can see that it masks the floor boxes just south of the line but does not mask the architectural walls, furniture, etc.
I have many views using this power plan template and the other views have no issues with masking regions. The view template sets the visual style to Hidden Line and the transparency of detail items to 0. There is just this one view that somehow has different properties. I have tried copying a working masking region from a different power plan view into this view and it no longer works.
This isn’t a direct answer to your question but is there not a better way of hiding things that you don't want to see?
If the background is a Revit model, change the visibility graphics in the Revit Links tab.
If the background is a CAD plan, change the layer visibility in the Imported Categories tab.
Does that not work?
This isn’t a direct answer to your question but is there not a better way of hiding things that you don't want to see?
If the background is a Revit model, change the visibility graphics in the Revit Links tab.
If the background is a CAD plan, change the layer visibility in the Imported Categories tab.
Does that not work?
I’m still not clear as to why you are using masking regions to hide parts of the link.
You should be able to turn off any category or filter out any families in the link by editing the settings in the view template.
What in particular are you trying to not see in the link?
I’m still not clear as to why you are using masking regions to hide parts of the link.
You should be able to turn off any category or filter out any families in the link by editing the settings in the view template.
What in particular are you trying to not see in the link?
It is a very large building with multiple areas. I'm using masking regions to be able to get the sheet notes on some of the sheets. The masking regions all work except for the power sheets that have wiring on them.
It is a very large building with multiple areas. I'm using masking regions to be able to get the sheet notes on some of the sheets. The masking regions all work except for the power sheets that have wiring on them.
@nschweitzer9ZNKA wrote:
It is a very large building with multiple areas. I'm using masking regions to be able to get the sheet notes on some of the sheets. The masking regions all work except for the power sheets that have wiring on them.
Why not crop the view properly? Use a custom shaped crop region if needs be.
@nschweitzer9ZNKA wrote:
It is a very large building with multiple areas. I'm using masking regions to be able to get the sheet notes on some of the sheets. The masking regions all work except for the power sheets that have wiring on them.
Why not crop the view properly? Use a custom shaped crop region if needs be.
I agree there are probably better ways to accomplish what you need, but you know your situation better that I do. Make sure that your view you are trying to place the mask on is NOT set to wireframe...
I agree there are probably better ways to accomplish what you need, but you know your situation better that I do. Make sure that your view you are trying to place the mask on is NOT set to wireframe...
It is not set to wireframe. Also, the masking region works great until I draw a wire. The wire breaks the masking region so it no longer masks what is behind it. However, all the views that don't have wires drawn have perfectly functioning masking regions. I feel like it's some kind of Revit glitch.
It is not set to wireframe. Also, the masking region works great until I draw a wire. The wire breaks the masking region so it no longer masks what is behind it. However, all the views that don't have wires drawn have perfectly functioning masking regions. I feel like it's some kind of Revit glitch.
Finding this is a very common problem that people have been running into for a long time. Today I found a work around that assigns the masking region to a new reference plane just above the liked cad. It works until you add something to the plan that would be below the masking region - like a 2d element or even a room. The color of the room is now masked which is the issue that I need help with now...
If you aren't worried about a similar situation though I would suggest setting the masking region to a new plane.
Finding this is a very common problem that people have been running into for a long time. Today I found a work around that assigns the masking region to a new reference plane just above the liked cad. It works until you add something to the plan that would be below the masking region - like a 2d element or even a room. The color of the room is now masked which is the issue that I need help with now...
If you aren't worried about a similar situation though I would suggest setting the masking region to a new plane.
you can also do it reverse, drop the cad to a lower plane and use a floor as the masking region. hint: always link your cad to generic model family first and load it into your model.. lower memory and avoid any junk linetypes.
we just realized a solution to the room color. filled regions that are the same color as the room assignment.
you can also do it reverse, drop the cad to a lower plane and use a floor as the masking region. hint: always link your cad to generic model family first and load it into your model.. lower memory and avoid any junk linetypes.
we just realized a solution to the room color. filled regions that are the same color as the room assignment.
I agree with @ToanDN , you should use crop region for the 3D elements, some 2d elements may still be visible depending on your annotation crop. For those I just hide them but there could be a better way to manage that.
I agree with @ToanDN , you should use crop region for the 3D elements, some 2d elements may still be visible depending on your annotation crop. For those I just hide them but there could be a better way to manage that.
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