JonKoch Posted August 31, 2023 Share Posted August 31, 2023 I've attached a screenshot of what I'm talking about. It's not a huge deal but I'm just curious if there's a way to make it so you can't see the eave end of the roof where it intersects with the gable of the other one. For the record, I'm a landscape designer and I'm just working on this as an illustrative piece for my site model. So don't critique the poor construction too much. Thanks! Quote Link to comment
cberg Posted August 31, 2023 Share Posted August 31, 2023 (edited) There is some way to probably join the roofs but that never works so well for me. I would copy the two sets of roofs off to the side by a set distance. Then take the roofs and subtract the solids. This gets you the intersected geometry. Using the 3d tool extract the shape of the new roof (minus the gable end). Then you can double click the roof and clip the rectangle to the new surface. Running to a meeting. Hope this helps. Roof Study.vwx Edited August 31, 2023 by cberg 1 Quote Link to comment
Ed Wachter Posted September 1, 2023 Share Posted September 1, 2023 If you haven't already tried it, I would at least try using the Connect/Combine Tool in the Basic tool pallet. For years I thought that tool was only joining lines, so I was delightfully surprised to learn that it joins roof faces. But as @@cberg pointed out, it doesn't always work. It seems to work only in the simplest cases. Your case might be that simple. Ed Quote Link to comment
cberg Posted September 2, 2023 Share Posted September 2, 2023 @Ed Wachter Unfortunately the Connect Combine tool will only join one roof to the other. It will not create a gable recess in the other. At least as far as I've been able to determine. Quote Link to comment
Tom W. Posted September 3, 2023 Share Posted September 3, 2023 On 8/31/2023 at 6:31 PM, JonKoch said: I've attached a screenshot of what I'm talking about. It's not a huge deal but I'm just curious if there's a way to make it so you can't see the eave end of the roof where it intersects with the gable of the other one. For the record, I'm a landscape designer and I'm just working on this as an illustrative piece for my site model. So don't critique the poor construction too much. Thanks! The way I do it came from @Jonathan Pickup + I'm sure he'd be happy to post a video demonstrating it. In the meantime the steps are: 1) In Top/Plan select both Roof objects + run Modify>Convert>Convert Copy to Lines, choosing the Hidden Line option. 2) Enter the resultant Group, use the Polygon tool in Inner Boundary Mode to shift-click in the spaces between the Lines to create a single polygon for each roof. 3) With the two Polygons selected, Invert Selection + delete the lines. 4) Ungroup the Polys + use them to clip each roof in turn. Polygons + Roofs prior to clipping: After clipping: 2 Quote Link to comment
Popular Post Jonathan Pickup Posted September 3, 2023 Popular Post Share Posted September 3, 2023 Hi Tom thank you for the mention. Just for you, I've made this movie: 8 1 Quote Link to comment
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