![]() In the above example, the family has an instance based Yes/No visibility parameter. ![]() Yes/No check boxes instead of detail level. But if you’re setting up families and you feel like you’re having to come up with creative solutions for simple things like the display of symbols, chances are you’re doing it wrong. I’m not here to stifle creativity, far from it. As the detail level of the view changes, the visibility of the symbol follows suit. Generally at fine mode the symbol would be switched off, coarse and medium you should follow your company standards. Simply select the nested annotation in the 3D family, click the visibility/graphics ovverides button in the properties dialogue and then choose when you want the symbol to appear. There is no need to get creative with visibility controlsĪt their most basic level, nested annotations should be controlled by the coarse/medium fine visibility settings. The idea of nesting an annotation symbol in a 3D family is so you can present both a “real life” display for coordination purposes and a symbolic representation for your drawings. ![]() One of the doozies though always seems to be the use of nested annotations and for whatever reason, these weird and wonderful annotation solutions always seem to be in electrical families. Over the years, I’ve seen some interesting Revit content. ![]()
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