Another thank-you... I was wondering how to set that default behavior. The code-writers for Revit are obviously not using their product, or they wouldn't hide these things so thoroughly! Thanks again.
Very informative, to perfectly do a construction drawing for stair one needs to understand also the actual construction and or installation methodology.
Do you, or anyone watching, happen to know how to join walls and stairs? Whatever I do, always some lines are visible. For most ugly example, I had stairs, under it walls on both sides 20cm thick (they were right next to outside wall), but on one side (interiour), on top side of stairs, 18 cm concrete wall as fence. This cannot be trimmed, cannot be joined, whichever way you manually edit shape of wall, always a bunch of lines remain in sections. The only YT video I find about this problem (wall + stairs joining) is some guy explaining how there is no point of even having stairs in final model, as they are architectural object, vs walls being structural. His way of doing that is simply using stairs as line guide on top of which he makes extruded structural object he can then join. So, do you know anything to solve this, or make his approach better (somehow "connected" with real stairs). Thank you!
Hi, I just checked it with Revit 2020 and the dot and arrow is there, so there is some other culprit. Make sure you have got your run selected and also make sure the run has not been converted to stair-by-sketch previously.
@@BIMforInteriorDesign Yes, my first training file was converted into a sketch. But the other files work great. Thanks for the answer and the excellent video tutorial, congratulations !!!
Thank you so much, finally someone explained and solve this issue once and for all.
Thank you so much. this solved my issue with how many stairs i wanted were not showing.
Glad to hear it helped you!
Sir, thanks for this in-depth explanation. Never know this information before.
Yeah, I did the tutorial because I was confused by the behavior for quite a long time.
Another thank-you... I was wondering how to set that default behavior. The code-writers for Revit are obviously not using their product, or they wouldn't hide these things so thoroughly!
Thanks again.
Yes, this is a bit of doozy. Sometimes it happens like this with such extensive software as Revit.
This is gold. Thank you very much.
Glad it helped!
Very informative, to perfectly do a construction drawing for stair one needs to understand also the actual construction and or installation methodology.
Yes, you are right.
Thank you for the short and informing tutorial!
Glad it was helpful!
its really helpful and it has cleared all the confusion . thank you Sir!
I am glad it helped.
Thank you so much for this help sir ❤️😊🙌
Glad it helped you!
It's really helpful and thnk you very very much
I am glad the tutorial helped.
Thank you very much 👏👏👏
thank you, man 👏🏽
Very useful tips! Thank you a lot!
I am glad the tip is helpful.
Very common problem solved
Thank you Sir
You're welcome.
Thank you sir valuable information
I am glad the tutorial is helpful.
thank you sir, this help a lot
I am glad it did.
Thanks for explanation
Happy to help.
Thanks, very helpful
I am glad it helped.
thanks a lot 😊😊😊😊😊😊
Thank you too.
Thanks alot!
thank you so much
You are welocome.
excellent. Thankful
I am glad it is hlepful.
Hi there, great video - please may i ask what your graphic display settings are? Many thanks
Hi, it is a variation of the defauly Hidden lines shading style. Mainly adding shadows and anti-aliasing.
Just skip to 8:30 welcome
Do you, or anyone watching, happen to know how to join walls and stairs? Whatever I do, always some lines are visible. For most ugly example, I had stairs, under it walls on both sides 20cm thick (they were right next to outside wall), but on one side (interiour), on top side of stairs, 18 cm concrete wall as fence. This cannot be trimmed, cannot be joined, whichever way you manually edit shape of wall, always a bunch of lines remain in sections. The only YT video I find about this problem (wall + stairs joining) is some guy explaining how there is no point of even having stairs in final model, as they are architectural object, vs walls being structural. His way of doing that is simply using stairs as line guide on top of which he makes extruded structural object he can then join. So, do you know anything to solve this, or make his approach better (somehow "connected" with real stairs). Thank you!
Only with version 2022 does it work, with 2021 does it work the same way, I have no visible arrow and dot
Hi, I just checked it with Revit 2020 and the dot and arrow is there, so there is some other culprit. Make sure you have got your run selected and also make sure the run has not been converted to stair-by-sketch previously.
@@BIMforInteriorDesign Yes, my first training file was converted into a sketch. But the other files work great. Thanks for the answer and the excellent video tutorial, congratulations !!!
@@GoshoGanchev Happy to hear you found the culprit of the problem.
thanks
You're welcome!
1.5x
😀