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Window going grey


Squiidly

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A window in a plan I'm working on turned grey when I selected it, which is to say, it became filled, though not the whole window, just the sill/stool/sash, the jamb remaining unfilled. I searched all over for a class within the window that might be hiding a fill that became engaged, but there is nothing. All parts are set to class "none", which has no fill. Any ideas?

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Setting a window pane style of "none" links that part of the window to the None class. If you do not have any special settings tied to the none class, it's likely set to the default solid fill of white with black pen.

Change the None option to something else, then set that class to the desired settings.

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Windows attributes are currently not consistent through all elements, so unfortunately this won't help in all cases.

Glazings, (answer to you, Don Berinati) for example, should have a solid fill coerced over the user defined class default. Without a solid fill, the rendering will fail.

* Glass elements of the side lights are correctly set: they have a solid fill.

* The glass panes of the leaf is not correct: all class attributes default to the defined class.

If the user defined class -lets say Style-Glazing 1- is set to fill "none" the side light' glass will display a rendering, while the leaf's glass won't.

Workaround: apply a solid fill to the chosen class for the glazing. This will "cure" missing glazing parts in the rendering.

A bug has been filed for this.

vsd

Edited by vsd
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Squidley -

If you are selecting the window in the drawing and referencing the class setting and attribute fill here, this is not going to get you what you need.

You'll need to define the different styles for the different components in the window by going into the window settings.

You can do this by either double clicking on the window or selecting the window and clicking on the Settings button in the Obj Info palette.

Under the Parts tab, choose the various style classes for the different components of the window and glazing style.

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