
#Revit duplicate windows on upper floor keygen#

The Sorting/Grouping options for both schedules will be the same. This is the filtering options for the second floor schedule. In this case, it was done to filter out toilet partition doors, which I did not want in my door schedule This schedule also has an additional filter to remove any doors that contain “X” in the type mark. To filter by just those doors on the first, floor, we add in that parameter. Now when you go back to your schedule, you only see the rooms on the first floor. In the “Filter” tab of the schedule properties, you would set the parameter to “Level” “equals” “First Floor”. Say you have a finish schedule and you just want to show the rooms on the first floor. Here the schedule has been sorted but not yet filtered. You usually don’t want this column visible in your sheet view.īelow is the schedule with the filtering parameter hidden, and sorted by level. Working Schedule – The column at the left in pink is the “Level” parameter that is used to sort the schedule. In this case, it’s great to have a set of “working” schedules that have additional fields visible, namely the ones that you want to filter by but may not want to print. You would probably filter the same way for anything that is easy to split by floor level. If it’s by floor, then that’s easy, choose the “Level” parameter. Next, you have to choose a parameter that you’re going to use to filter your schedule.

You filter, duplicate, and then filter again! What’s that you say? Let’s take a step back and walk through this.įirst, you want to find a logical place to split it – by floor (for a finish, door, window, or signage schedule) by material group (material schedule), or any other logical place. It’s the eleventh hour, you’re putting the finishing touches on your schedules when you realize that some of them are too long to fit on one sheet! Oh no! What do you do?
