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Cris with no H

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Posts posted by Cris with no H

  1. Lucas, I have to agree with the Fit Walls To Roof command workflow here. It is FAR easier to create some temporary 3D geometry, tell the walls to fit to it, then delete the geometry than to go to the shenanigans involved in the other tactics mentioned. I don't even want to go into the possible problems you set up for yourself using the Wall Recess like you did.

  2. Hey, I'm having trouble activating 2010 on a fresh Snow Leopard install on a netbook. I'm connected to the internet and have no firewalls turned on. But the activation error message thinks I'm not connected. I recall having this problem once before, but don't remember how I fixed it. Anybody have any advice?

    Cris Dopher

  3. Is there, or has there ever been, a perspective or warp tool? I seem to recall a long time ago a tool similar to Sheer, but that took an object or group of objects and let you warp it much like you would in Photoshop's Transform.

    Thanks,

    Cris Dopher

  4. I think the main problem is, you've been trying to make this conversion while INSIDE a symbol - the big one that includes everything. Conversion should be done from regular model space, not from within the editing space of a giant symbol.

    Select any symbol you want to ungroup and choose Edit>Convert>Convert to Group, or ctrl-K. You can then Ungroup as normal.

    It is misleading to talk of AutoCAD equivalents in VW, as it is missing many of the dichotomies of VW (2D/3D, classes/layers, etc). In this case, it misses the difference between groups and symbols. They have one construct for both: the block. Likewise, they only have eXplode to convert things downwards to simpler entities, whereas we Ungroup groups and Convert to Group higher-order objects like Symbols and PIOs.

  5. Michael, I too wish Light On would return to the OIP. I don't care if it's just a shortcut to the Viz Palette in the sofware's mind, but the Viz Palette is a PITA just to check one beam here and there.

    Cris Dopher

  6. This post comes a little late, and I apologize for that, but I wanted to alert the community to Vectorworks classes being offered at Fashion Institute of Technology in New York. The Department of Visual Presentation and Exhibit Design offers Vectorworks I and Vectorworks II this semester as night courses - 3 hours once a week for 16 weeks. Vectorworks I is largely about the 2D and Vectorworks II, which I'm teaching, gets much more into the 3D, as well as some of the finer points of the 2D tools and document and resource management.

    The courses cost NY state residents less than $300.

    If you're interested, please contact Professor Lawrence Langham, the department chair, at 212 217 5482 or email him at LAWRENCE_LANGHAM@fitnyc.edu.

    Thanks,

    Cris Dopher

  7. I'd suggesting looking at the Fill of those objects in the attributes palette. Perhaps they are mistakenly being assigned No Fill, which will keep any texture from rendering and let you see the object ONLY in wireframe.

    On the other hand, perhaps you could prompt your school to join the 21st century and upgrade its VW license?

  8. There is a drop-down menu in the Import Single DXF/DWG dialogue that lets you choose whether AutoCAD objects should be imported as 2d only, 3d only, or both.

    It is possible, though, that the AutoCAD draftsman did not put any 3D into the file.

  9. There ARE, however, screen re-draw issues with your curtain too, Andrew.

    Strictly speaking modeling, here, for a flat curved surface, I'd simply extrude an arc or polyline of the right shape to the right height from plan view. An arc will end up a half-cylinder shape when the extrude is filled, unfortunately, so using the Extract tool from the modeling toolset will let you take off just the curved shape. You can then delete the original extrude. Using polyline, though, avoids this problem.

  10. i am using vw2009 for some time now and Christian I think your strategy of upgrading one seat, evaluating, and then going for more licenses when the time is right seems very logical.

    I do think both you and Brendan will be very happy with the interface improvement and improvements in 2D speed and stability. Let's not even talk about modeling here - we all have to ouput flat ol' 2D drawings to get our job done. I can attest that I have gotten several things done recently in about an hour that would have taken half a day in 2008 or earlier, if I could have done them at all. I'm talking complex polylines with thousands of holes, adding, subtracting, offsetting, etc. Simple things in 2009 have been the most valuable to me, primarily the Loupe, tool object highlighting, and grey others while in groups. It doesn't SOUND astounding...until you realize your drafting time is reduced by a significant margin.

    Crashes happen, sure...but, eh... maybe some less than VW2008. And I have 2009 set to automatically save the last three backups at 26 minute intervals. :)

    Cris Dopher

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