- #REVIT 2011 DESIGN OPTIONS TUTORIAL FULL#
- #REVIT 2011 DESIGN OPTIONS TUTORIAL WINDOWS 7#
- #REVIT 2011 DESIGN OPTIONS TUTORIAL PROFESSIONAL#
Yes, it’s still one sweep or reveal in/on the wall, but you will have a joint where the wall was split. From the looks of it, Revit won’t join two sweeps or reveals back together into one continuous piece.
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It doesn’t matter if it’s an integral (within the wall type) or an applied (outside the wall type) sweep or reveal…it will act the same. So, if you have a wall that has a sweep or reveal in/on the wall and you split it, it won’t go back to one wall if you try and drag the ends together. So as a test, we took the wall and edited the structure to remove the sweep and then tried the same thing…bingo, dragging the ends back together joined the walls into one again. When I grabbed the wall though, I noticed in the Ribbon the Edit Returns for sweeps was an option. Since the wall was cleaning up the join, Disallow Join wasn’t turned on, so it was kind of a mystery. Problem was that when he dragged the end back together, it cleaned up but didn’t join the walls together to make one wall. Had a customer call in and say that he had split a wall to pull the ends apart for something, but now he needed to take the gap away and make the wall one again. Interesting thing came up today while working the support line.
#REVIT 2011 DESIGN OPTIONS TUTORIAL WINDOWS 7#
Windows 7 or Vista processor: Pentium 4, AMD Athlon dual-core, 3.0 GHz or higher with SSE2 technology, or Quad Core Intel® Xeon® W3570 3.20GHz, 8M 元, 6.4GT/s Turbo or equivalent AMD processor (recommended)ģ GB RAM (8 GB or more recommended) NOTE: If you are running a 64bit OS, get a minimum of 4GB, but definitely recommend a minimum of 8GB…especially if you work on larger/complex projects.ĭisplay adapter capable of 24-bit color for basic graphics or 256 MB DirectX® 9-capable graphics card with Shader Model 3 (recommended) NOTE: Try to get a dedicated graphics card…saw too many issues with shared cards in 2010. Windows 7 or Vista processor: Intel® Pentium® 4 or AMD Athlon® dual-core processor, 3.0 GHz or higher with SSE2 technology
#REVIT 2011 DESIGN OPTIONS TUTORIAL PROFESSIONAL#
Microsoft® Windows® 7 64-bit Enterprise, Ultimate, Business, or Home Premium edition Microsoft® Windows Vista ® 64-bit (SP2 or later)(recommended), including Enterprise, Ultimate, Business, or Home Premium edition or Microsoft® Windows® XP Professional 圆4 SP2 Microsoft® Windows® 7 32-bit Enterprise, Ultimate, Business, or Home Premium edition Microsoft® Windows Vista ® 32-bit (SP2 or later) Enterprise, Ultimate, Business, or Home Premium or Microsoft® Windows® XP (SP2 or later) Professional or Home edition
#REVIT 2011 DESIGN OPTIONS TUTORIAL FULL#
If you want to see the full list, check out this PAGE. Here’s the information from the Autodesk website…filtered slightly. Actually, looking at the list the only thing that really stands out is they are actually support Windows 7…which really isn’t a surprise since many have been using 2010 without an issue for a while. Want to see some videos from 2011, check out the YouTube channel from Autodesk - Īh, a new release and a new set of system requirements (recommendations) for your pc’s to run Revit 2011.
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