The following recommended practices help you to control the visibility and appearance of the objects in a structural model.
+ While using the Visibility/Graphic Overrides dialog box, move the dialog box to one side so that you can see most of the view window.
+ Click Apply before closing the Visibility/Graphic Overrides dialog box to see the changes. This allows you to check your override settings and make repeated changes more quickly.
+ To customize the appearance of objects in all the views of the structural model, override the appearance for the desired structural model categories in the Object Styles dialog box. If you want the desired display characteristics for model objects to appear in all projects, save the Object Styles settings in your project templates. This saves time when you start new projects.
+ When working on a project having linked Revit models, use the options on the Revit Links Categories tab in the Visibility/Graphic Overrides dialog box. This allows you to easily control the visibility of objects in linked files by using the host file view, the linked file view, or custom settings.
+ When you work with linked structural models from different architects, nonstructural objects, such as architectural walls, do not display by default in structural views. These structural views include the plan, elevation, section, and 3D views. To set the default visibility characteristics of views, use the Discipline instance property of views. You can set the Discipline instance property of a view to Structural, Architectural, or Coordination to control the visibility of nonstructural items. When the Discipline value of a view is set to Structural, the nonstructural walls do not appear. This helps you simplify views for working while keeping an architectural model linked.
+ To repeat the same graphical adjustments on a number of views, automate the process by creating and assigning view templates. You use view templates to apply view settings to multiple views.
+ Specific view settings can be included or excluded from a view template. For example, if the scale setting is excluded from a view template, it can then be applied to views of various scales.
+ While using the Visibility/Graphic Overrides dialog box, move the dialog box to one side so that you can see most of the view window.
+ Click Apply before closing the Visibility/Graphic Overrides dialog box to see the changes. This allows you to check your override settings and make repeated changes more quickly.
+ To customize the appearance of objects in all the views of the structural model, override the appearance for the desired structural model categories in the Object Styles dialog box. If you want the desired display characteristics for model objects to appear in all projects, save the Object Styles settings in your project templates. This saves time when you start new projects.
+ When working on a project having linked Revit models, use the options on the Revit Links Categories tab in the Visibility/Graphic Overrides dialog box. This allows you to easily control the visibility of objects in linked files by using the host file view, the linked file view, or custom settings.
+ When you work with linked structural models from different architects, nonstructural objects, such as architectural walls, do not display by default in structural views. These structural views include the plan, elevation, section, and 3D views. To set the default visibility characteristics of views, use the Discipline instance property of views. You can set the Discipline instance property of a view to Structural, Architectural, or Coordination to control the visibility of nonstructural items. When the Discipline value of a view is set to Structural, the nonstructural walls do not appear. This helps you simplify views for working while keeping an architectural model linked.
+ To repeat the same graphical adjustments on a number of views, automate the process by creating and assigning view templates. You use view templates to apply view settings to multiple views.
+ Specific view settings can be included or excluded from a view template. For example, if the scale setting is excluded from a view template, it can then be applied to views of various scales.
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