Mate I’ve been watching you over the last year. In my final year in architecture and far you have saved me and my mates so many times! Thank you for your really clear, straight forward and easy to follow videos! Love them!
I see you rarely reply to comments, but do you feel this is as difficult and as convoluted as it appears to me? - Go to visibility/graphics (click) - Filter Tab (click) - Edit/New Button (click) - Click on New Filter Button (click) - Name the filter with typing (click) - Pick OK (click) - Find Furniture from the list (click) - Change parameter to 'Type Comment' parameter (click) - Type "Standing" (click) - Hit Apply (click) - Hit OK (click) - Hit Add (click) - Pick the appropriate filter & OK (click) - Go to Patterns/Override (click) - Choose Patterns, scroll up/down to find the pattern you want then OK (click) - Choose Colors and pick a new color culminating with another OK (click) - OK button (click) - Apply button (click) ."... And... There we go... It was a very easy change" That's EIGHTEEN clicks!! Not to mention the typing and the sub menus you duck in and out of! Surely you have to agree that this is a pretty clunky user interface? I see you nimbly moving around in it, but great googly moogly!! There's nothing straight-forward or easy about that. Seems like this could be reduced by at least 5 clicks if not more. Scary how much of a deep dive you have to do to get to the filters before you can start making changes. And all the redundant OK then APPLY... Seems like OK should mean APPLY already. I'm pretty good with AutoCAD and think they should go see how AutoCAD implements filters... MUCH easier. Thoughts? PS: Great demo as always!!
I agree with you. Revit is unnecessarily convoluted on many things compared to autocad. And the excessive amount of mouse clicks beside being counterproductive also tend to have you in danger of developing stress injury on your wrist.
Is there a way to create a filter that affects only material layers from a custom wall?, What i want to do is color the last finish material layer from walls "Only finishes"