Alaskan_Son

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Everything posted by Alaskan_Son

  1. As Eric said right mouse button OR Alt key.
  2. You might want those lines if you were particular about how you wanted certain walls constructed. In the wall's Structure tab is a heading titled Wall Intersections. That setting decides how your walls will be constructed. For example, the 2 rooms in the attached image are identical. One is displaying framing and one is not so you can see what is happening with the wall intersections. The wall at the top is set to "Through Wall At Start" and "Through Wall At End".
  3. I understand. If you weren't already using that macro I would have had a solution for you is all.
  4. BTW, if you Label and Title your pages well enough so that you know which is which, you can make pretty quick work of reordering the pages with your project browser open. You can see the whole list of pages in the project browser. All you have to do is double click on the appropriate page to get you to the page and then use the Exchange tools to move the page around.
  5. I could be wrong, but the only way to do this that I know of is to use the Exchange With Previous Page and Exchange With Next Page tools. It would be nice if we could see the entire layout all at once and drag pages around like we can with some PDF editors but alas...not something we can do in Chief right now.
  6. Pretty sure that's exactly what the tool was made for.
  7. I probably wouldn't even mess with the 3D. I would just put the thing on its own layer and simply turn that layer off in 3D.
  8. Click on the Line Style tab and under Drawing Group, select Back Group.
  9. Can you clarify a bit. What exactly failed?
  10. You're welcome. FWIW, you can override those snaps by using one of the 2 outside handles, just not the handles for adjusting the column widths.
  11. Just got back to the office and tested out...I'm about 99.99% certain it's the width of a single space. Test it with different text size settings and it becomes pretty apparent.
  12. This came up in another thread not too long ago. I don't see why a person couldn't just create a custom electrical symbol for this type of thing and just replace the CAD block with an arrow.
  13. I think you might be onto something. Those schedules are font/text based and so that jump is probably the distance of a single space.
  14. I'm away from my computer so can't really test anything, but you know you can hold down control to override that right?
  15. I've actually many many times thought that a reset button would be nice. This would really be a good a good one for the suggestion forum. In the meantime, consider using one or more of the following... "Working" layer sets: Layer sets that are set up specifically for drawing with and not for presentations. "Trash" layer sets: Layer sets you copy for temporary use. You just need to go through and clean them up from time to time. All On and All Off Layer Sets: I think these 2 layer sets may be heavily underappreciated. They are super easy to fool around with and then reset by simply clicking Select All and then checking (or unchecking) Display. I use these a lot. They become even more useful if you get used to quickly manipulating them with the Layer Hider and with the ALDO (Active Layer Display Options). An extremely minor detail, but just as a side note the one layer that really ever causes any sort of problem for me is the Walls, Main Layer Only layer. When you check Display to reset your All On layer set it also turns that layer on...which more often than not you probably want off.
  16. Actually the break tool will still make a complete break. Its not by double clicking anymore though. Click the break tool and then on the little edit tool bar that pops up, click the Complete Break tool (looks like the break tool with a little C by it). You can also just assign Complete Break to a hotkey so you don't have to click on it...maybe use the number 4? 3 is the default hotkey for the Break Line tool so all you would have to do is type 34 and you would get a complete break wherever you click.
  17. Not sure I'm following you correctly or not, but I think the only way to get what you're after might be to create a Doorway at that location, build a no room definition wall (with whatever wall type and thickness you need) resized in plan and elevation view so it fits perfectly in the opening, then create a door that fills that no room definition wall.
  18. You're right. I guess I wasn't thinking about that being a view specific setting. I guess your best bet might just be to get used to hitting P (the default hotkey assigned to the Perspective Crop Mode) or add the tool to your toolbar for quick access, or both. You might want to actually post this as a suggestion. I think it would be a good one. I personally like Perspective Crop Mode toggled off, but I think it should be in Preferences or Defaults somewhere for those that want it on.
  19. Mike, Open a blank plan, toggle Crop Mode on, and then File>Templates>Save As Template...select your Profile Plan. Or, make the change, Save As and select your Profile Plan. Or, simply open your Profile Plan, make the change, and then Save and close. NOTE: If you're using a plan other than the Profile Plan as your template, make the changes to that plan file instead.
  20. 3D>Camera View Options...check Perspective Crop Mode. This should behave like what you're used to. There were some changes made to X8 to allow for better 3D navigation. By default now the camera actually moves when you zoom in (Perspective Crop Mode unchecked or toggled off). What it used to do was actually zoom the camera without moving it (Perspective Crop Mode checked or toggled on).
  21. At the risk of being ridiculed here. I for one don't think scale is nearly as important as some people do...at least not for what I do. For example, I print pretty much all my cabinetry plans on 8-1/2" x 11" paper and I'd much rather fill the page with a good looking and readable set of plans than to stick with scale just for the sake of sticking with scale. I don't want people pulling numbers from my plans via scale anyway. We were a framing subcontractor for years and the vast majority of plans we framed off had "Do Not Scale" printed on them and for good reason. Not only was the scale sometimes off, paper media is unstable at best...especially on the jobsite where things get torn, wet and muddy, dried back out, etc. I think pulling scale from plans is actually almost always a bad idea from a subcontractors standpoint, a builders standpoint and from a designers standpoint. Having said that...I do draw to scale whenever reasonably possible, I just don't make a big issue of it and if NTS works best for a particular situation...than NTS it is.
  22. Alrighty then. For those of you curious... I finally found where all those other libraries are hidden. I was close... They in a hidden Program Data folder. Finally found them via Preferences>Folders>All Program Paths>Show Here are some quick screenshots...Note that there's around 6,000,000 KB (6,000 MB) in the manufacturer catalog alone.
  23. Rich is correct. Looks like magic number is 2/3. (its 50% larger than a 1:1 scale). Easiest way to tell is by simply drawing a line at a known dimension (the larger the number the more accurate) in 2 directions (just to make sure the detail hasn't been distorted) and then doing the math. In this case I measured: 1. The 2x4 ledger at the eve in the vertical direction which was 5-1/4". 3-1/2 (3.50) divided by 5-1/4 (5.25) equals 2/3 (.667) 2. The 2x6 top plate in the horizontal dimension which was 8-1/4". 5-1/2 (5.50) divided by 8-1/4 (8.25) also equals 2/3 (.667) I like to use a normal line to check dimensions like that. Draw the line, open the dbx and check the length. Its usually a lot more accurate than any dimension defaults you might have set up. Once you figure the resize factor simply group select and resize as Rich suggested. If your numbers suggested 2 different resize factors (the detail had been distorted for some reason...Simply group select, block it, open the CAD Block dbx and assign the appropriate size factors...one for the width and another for the height.