At this point I suggest you sit down with the team and review what you couldn’t do, what you still need to figure out, where you “cheated,” and all the little things that caused frustration. There will be many lessons learned in this initial project. The Annotate tab will house your “go to” tools. You’ll turn to detail lines or detail components and filled regions to make things work. On a real project, with real deadlines attached, you might not have time to work through how to do things correctly, or have the time to make a family work at all. Even if you come prepared with great training, you’ll quickly find that when you use Revit on a real project, not everything will work like it did in your training sessions. The first project is a frustrating one because, as a new Revit user, you will be learning the program as you are working on your project. Seasoned Revit users have learned to cope, and now you can, too. The aforementioned “little” things aren’t a thought anymore, but other little things are. Is Ortho on or off? How about snap? No more of that.īut as you continue and stop playing with your simple 3D house, you start working on a real project. When you switched from the wall tool to the door tool, you didn’t change layers-you didn’t even think about it. Now place the door, step 2, and move it 6 inches away from the wall. Well, the temporary dimension you see when placing it tells you, so no more step 1. For example, you want to know how far the door is from the wall. Wow! There are little things you’ll want to know. Pick the wall tool, draw a wall by picking two points, pick the door tool, place the door, then go see it in 3D. When you first start using Autodesk® Revit®, it seems easy. Back May 5th, 2012 Things to Remember as a Revit Beginner
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |