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@@dorota5006 make sure that you choose intersection instead of subtraction with upward extrusion when applying solid element operation and thank me later😃
I have a question how can you do that same process without the object of the window being cut off by what it turns off is morfh and is shaped like an earthenware
Hi! Thanks for the videos, really helpful. The morphs used on walls stairs etc. must be kept in place - just put them on another layer as you did here and turn it off. My question is: are the wall and the morph linked together? and if not is there a way to link them so that when ever I move the wall the morph will move with it?
Thank you. No, they are not linked together and I do not know any way to connect the wall and the morph to achieve waht you want. This doesn't mean there is no way, but I simply don't know that it is possible to link them. Sorry.
Hello man great video, but i have a different question regarding walls. I am trying to add a plaster band to the top of a wall, three in fact, each sticking out a different distance from the wall. Is there any way to achieve this ?
I would use the profile manager to do that. You draw the bands in profile in 2D and transform them to a wall itself. Check out this video: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-2SfNFUkKtYI.html
@@Architect.u.Reality dann würde die Wand alle Wand-spezifischen Eigenschaften verlieren. Man könnte keine Fenster und Türen mehr einsetzen z.B. Sie würde nicht mehr automatisch verschneiden, ich konnte nicht mehr den Aufbau nachträglich ändern usw. Ganz zu schweigen von den BIM-Eigenschaften. Ein Morph ist ein totes Objekt ohne Property Sets. Der Morph macht also leider keinen Sinn. Ein Morph sollte in Archicad immer die letzte Wahl sein.