![]() ![]() I do know that some bad models I've encountered also had drafting views with very large extents. ![]() I don't have any evidence that this model was bad because drafting views were huge. Now, the natural question to ask is, "Does it matter?" I don't know but if large extents are bad in model views I can reasonably infer that it might also be bad in drafting views. It's about the same number of "clicks" either way. The PyRevit application has a handy function to place a pair of intersecting lines at the origin of a view. Linked via Origin to Origin places that DWG at the origin of the view. The old trick to find the origin in Revit was to import/link a DWG with a crosshair at the world coordinate system origin. I routinely encounter projects that have very large drafting views, when you know where the origin is. We can but it might help to know that they do have an origin and you can end up quite from from the origin if we use an external file to sketch over (which happens a lot). Drafting views look like a blank sheet of paper we can drop your pen and start sketching in.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |