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Andrew Bell@NV

Vectorworks, Inc Employee
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  • Occupation
    Software Engineer
  • Homepage
    http://www.vectorworks.net
  • Location
    Columbia, MD, USA

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  1. Those objects predate parametric objects, and viewports, and I think even by-class overrides, as does the decision to force lines in hidden line rendering to solid. The (intended) behavior certainly could be changed, but needs interface consideration (we don't want to break old files that depend on the old behavior), etc., and thus would be an enhancement.
  2. Walls, pillars, floors, and roof faces can show as dashed lines in plan view, but show as solid lines in 3-D views.
  3. Vectorworks intentionally forces objects with dashed line styles to draw as solid lines in hidden line, so objects can have a dash style in plan view but show as solid lines in rendered views. So the backdoor you discovered, allowing class styles to avoid this change in viewports only, was not intentional. An ugly workaround, at least for your example, is to duplicate your underlying viewport, set the duplicate to hidden line, update, convert to group, and then enter that group and change the line styles to your desired style. Of course that won't update automatically. I've added an enhancement request that links to your post and pic for Vectorworks to have more flexibility in allowing dashed lines in hidden line, possibly as a Line Render Option.
  4. If you really want a touchscreen VectorWorks pad, there is the Axiotron Modbook.
  5. You can still buy a new computer with Windows XP, and it is still the most widely used OS in the world. You haven't been able to buy a PowerPC Mac to run Vectorworks on since August 2006. NNA doesn't want to drop support for older hardware and OSes that people are still using, but continuing to do so hamstrings the newer versions (as newer versions of tools and libraries aren't supported for the old OS), and takes lots of development and testing. At some point it's no longer resource-effective to do so, and Apple's decision to drop support with Snow Leopard is pretty much the death-knell for the PowerPC. And as the owner of one of the latest Intel Mac Minis, I can tell you they run Vectorworks quite nicely.
  6. No. I am saying all the service packs for 2008 were generally bug fix upgrades, not additional features like the old .5 releases (which could add bugs.) And NNA promotes the upgrades based on new capabilities, not bug fixes. The only possible exception I can think of is Parasolid, but that was also promoted as faster and that it would allow us additional capabilities. I'm not saying anything about NNA's level of support for older versions, I'd say that's unchanged. The original poster implied it had changed.
  7. I'd say it's quite the reverse. Now NNA has yearly updates with only bug fixes, rather than major and minor releases approximately every nine months. New features introduce new opportunities for bugs, and now there are fewer of those opportunities . Also, Parasolid licensing means NNA is paying more for a more reliable solids/surface modeler, rather than less for a cheaper but less reliable modeler. But as always, if bugs are hindering you in your work, report them to bugsubmit@nemetschek.net.
  8. A coworker of mine said that SP2 was 82099. If it's 82613, it should have a fix for that problem then. (Note, however, that *that* fix causes a problem with stretching walls in Rotated Plan views. We have a fix for the bug caused by the fix, but it's not released yet AFAIK.) Even us NNAers are running into confusion with these version name changes...
  9. The recent files list is a list stored by VectorWorks, not something linked to the actual files. Use the File Open dialog to look for your files and they should be there.
  10. The bug is still in SP2 (build 82099, unless I'm much mistaken), but should be fixed soon for VW2008.
  11. It is a bug, but the workaround is fairly easy. Put 3-D locus points in the symbol at the top and bottom endpoints of the wall, and the wall hole-cutting code will use those to determine how to break the wall.
  12. I made the mistake of going into Costco recently. I walked past a 65" LCD, 58" plasma, 52" LCDs, 50" plasmas, 46" LCDs ... when I finally got to the 42" LCDs, they looked so *tiny*.
  13. Yes, iMacs work well with second monitors. You will need a mini-DVI -> DVi converter (unless the new Macs have changed), which will cost around $20. I've hooked up my 17" Core Duo iMac to a 42" LCD TV on occasion (at up to 1920x1200). You can either mirror the original display or have a separate one. The VW 12.5.3 release should hopefully solve the Leopard/VW interface issue.
  14. I do, but that's because I pull Dave's out instead of mine.
  15. There is an active bug for this issue, so we have several files we're already looking into. The odds are good the cause of problems with those files is the same as with your file. So if you haven't sent it in already and would find it difficult, you may want to hold off.
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