Joe_Carrick

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Everything posted by Joe_Carrick

  1. What you are seeing is the bottom of the 2nd Base Cabinet that you are using as a top front of the furniture vanity you created. Make that Cabinet to be just 1-5/8" deep and then move it out 20" from the wall.
  2. Look at values "C" & "L" in that dbx. Once you have those correct, go to the room below and edit the "Ceiling" Structure or Finish "J" to make up the difference. I usually use the "J" and just add an Air Gap and Joist Size above the Drywall.
  3. Arkad7, Ceiling heights on lower floors are dependent on the floor elevation of the room(s) above and their floor structure thickness (including in some cases the ceiling structure of individual rooms). Depending on how complicated the overlapping rooms above are it can be a bit difficult to get everything the way you want it. In order for anyone here to really help, you will need to post your plan and explain what you want where.
  4. Some AV programs may think a dll is a threat and will consequently take action to prevent it from executing. If that's the case then setting an exemption in the AV software should solve that problem. Note that you would need to set up the exemption after the Chief install and before the AV software performs a scan. I make sure that any exe's and dll's for legitimate apps (not just Chief) are exempted in my AV software. That's just a good practice.
  5. Macros will only execute if the Text they are imbedded in are displayed. That could be any of the following: An Object Label (Room, Cabinet, Door, Window, Framing, Wall, Symbol, etc) Text Rich Text The macro doesn't need to actually return a displayed value (it might just perform some calculations and/or set one or more Global Variables or read/write to a file), but the text object must be set to be shown and be on a visible layer. There are a couple of ways to force a re-display: The F5 key or (G5 key assuming it has been mapped) to cause a "Refresh" Do a Print Preview in the Layout - this causes a "Display of all Views sent to Layout" If you follow the above, you shouldn't have any problems with macros being executed.
  6. The G5 key causes a "Refresh" and forces all "visible" macros to be executed. I use a couple of macros to set "Ruby Global Variables" that may be needed by other macros. They set those "Globals" but display nothing. Some of them are in Room Labels, some in Cabinet Labels, some in other Labels, and some in Text Boxes. One way to get all macros to execute is to do a "Print Preview" in the Layout. This essentially displays all the Plan Views that have been sent to Layout and forces the macros in those views to execute.
  7. What version of Windows are you using? Updating your signature with your system info may help get to the bottom of your problem.
  8. I would suggest you request the Contractor to submit it as shop drawings of what he's proposing. If a contractor want's to do something different that the original design then it's up to him/her to submit that.
  9. Text Arrows are really for connecting from an existing text object to something you want to point to. Personally, I prefer "Leader Line Text" in most cases. When I want a second arrow I simply "Add an Arrow" or use a "Text Arrow" starting at the center of the existing Text. In either case, I do not get the problem you are experiencing.
  10. I was unable to duplicate your result using "Leader Line Text". Note that you can also simply "break" the existing line and then adjust the arrowhead location. IAE, I don't know how you got the result you did. It's obvious that the offending line isn't connected - just by looking at your pic because there are no handles on the first segment. I was able to do it by drawing a new "Text Arrow" with the second point at the existing arrowhead.
  11. Why not just use the Shelf Tool (one of the Cabinet Tools)
  12. It might be useful to know what your GPU (Graphics Card) specs are.
  13. OK, If I assume (probably a mistake on my part) that you want to display a Callout matching a "Cross Section Camera Callout" from a Plan View in an Elevation and have it display the same data as it does in the Plan - then what you really need is the ability to display that "Camera Callout" in the Elevation. That would be nice but wouldn't work unless the Cross Section Camera was on a single plane perpendicular to the Elevation (no offsets in Plan). Currently, Chief doesn't allow us to display the "Cross Section Camera" in any views except the Plan Views. Chief hasn't provided Callouts for "Details" in Elevations. It would be a nice addition.
  14. Adam, I'm still trying to understand the "Callout" in an Elevation. As stated previously, only "Camera Callouts" have the ability to recognize the Layout which the view has been sent to. Since general "Callouts" don't reference another view, there simply isn't anything for them to use. Can you please show a pic (even of what you do manually) to explain what you are trying to do?
  15. Glenn's explanation of "Section Lines" is spot on. I set them in the Layer Set to be the line weight I want. It's also notable that anything cut in section (Beams, Joists, Plates, Deck Boards, etc) can be connected by an arrow with a text block containing a macro to get automatic annotation. Unfortunately, the Section Lines are only CAD Lines so they do not carry the same information but they can be edited to user defined layers and layer is an attribute that can be used to label the line. A macro that returns the "layer" of the referenced object can be useful for annotation.
  16. Johnny, Layers and Floor Levels are two totally different things. Everything in Chief is assigned to a Floor Level (aka Floor Number) which can't be changed. This is the Floor Level that was active when the object was created. Everything in Chief is assigned to a Layer which can be displayed or not in any give Layer Set. The Layer of annotation objects can be controlled by how the Annosets (Active Defaults) are set up. Most items can be edited to be on whatever Layer you want - but they will then be on that Layer in all Layer Sets.
  17. Johnny, That isn't really true. All 2D CAD (lines, arcs, text, dimensions, annotation) is drawn on the "Current CAD Layer". 3D Objects (walls, doors, windows, cabinets, appliances, framing, etc) are drawn automatically on their specific Default Layers. There are 2 basic ways to change the "Current CAD Layer" Click on the little dbl square icon with CAD in it (by default it's in the 2nd tool bar at the top of the screen). Set it up in your Annosets so that when you select the "Plot Plan Annoset" it will automatically select the "CAD, Plot Plan" layer. Annosets also allow you to specify the layer and other properties for dimensions and other annotation objects.
  18. Adam, What do you mean by an "Elevation Callout"? Can you post a pic of what you would want? Maybe it's something new in X10 - I understand there are some things coming that might provide that sort of functionality.
  19. It's hard for me to tell why based on what you said. I'm assuming that you just put a Callout in the Elevation View and want that to show the Layout Sheet where the view is located. That actually doesn't make much sense to me because it would only show up on that Layout Sheet anyway. IAE, Generally, macros are "Greyed Out" in a view because they would generate an error. OTOH, in the case of the "Global" macros it may be that CA has just decided that the macro isn't valid for that view. They may or may not be correct in that assumption. The only places the Global>Layout Macros are valid is on the Layout Page (Text Objects including Layout Box Labels) and in Camera Callouts in the Plan. They are not valid in most Plan views because the Plan doesn't know what Layout File or Page the view has been sent to.
  20. You have to adjust the depth of the sides. The attached pics show how it works. I set the back to have a "Left Door" and the Front to have just a "Blank Area". I also suppressed the "Toe Kick" and I would create a separate base for the "Toe Kick" using a PSolid.
  21. Marshall, I don't think there are many users here that are still using version 10. Most are using X8 or X9. Your Plans would have to be converted and then you wouldn't be able to open them unless you upgraded. I think X9 can still open a version 10 Plan but I'm not sure.
  22. Glenn, Check the Scale of your Plan. That should only happen if the scale is way off. btw, this only happens when decimal units are used. Since my Plans are Imperial using ft-in ('-") Chief converts internally and the Scientific E notation is irrelevant. With Metric Plans if the scale is "wonky" you could get that result. I'm not sure what the ratio would need to be, but a very large number of mm would cause Chief to return the Scientific E notation.
  23. Another way to do it is to use an "Angle Front Cabinet and set the Back to match the Front. Then just turn the Cabinet around 180 degrees.
  24. Decks are defined in Chief similarly to Wall Types. If you set them up in the Room Defaults for each "Deck Room Type" they will conform to the materials defined in the "Floor Structure Definition" for each Layer of the assembly. You can edit the individual Deck Rooms in the same way, but if the materials are set to "Use Default" then it it will pick up what you have in that default.