Thank you for your video. A question plz does the embedded elements can be scheduled if they are in a different link? Say if we want to create a room schedule in the architecture model and that room schedule contains furniture from the interior model?
I would create a new parameter that was a yes/no box for inclusion in the schedule instead of filtering. The most robust way would be to have a shared parameter from the room family and then use that to filter.
@@tictoon the yes/no thing is not as robust because it would require setting/un-setting it for every room. The best solution would be an intelligent way to check for NO furniture instances in a room and filter out that way, because new rooms with no furniture or room with furniture later removed would self-filter.
@@HerbHalstead Correct, I just think that the work to implement a solution would outpace the ease of the yes/no solution. And I don't mean it to be robust, but just a quick and dirty way to get the job done. Agreed with your filtering idea, just seems complex.
As usual I found this to be a very informative video.
Great stuff
Thank You Sir for this great Tutorial, It helps a lot. God Bless
thanks to you, i am what i am today.. thanks a lot.. keet it up
thanks for your videos!
Thanks for your time nice explanation 😊
Thank u for everything.. can u make a video about how to make a custom door handle?!
Thank you for your video. A question plz does the embedded elements can be scheduled if they are in a different link? Say if we want to create a room schedule in the architecture model and that room schedule contains furniture from the interior model?
I'm using Revit 2025.2 and I do not have the embedded schedule tab. Is there a setting I need to turn on to see embedded schedules?
Do you know how to export in excel this type of embedded schedules? It's never work for me
filtering those rooms out by number seems less than a robust way to remove those rooms Is there a way to filter them out by furniture count?
I would create a new parameter that was a yes/no box for inclusion in the schedule instead of filtering.
The most robust way would be to have a shared parameter from the room family and then use that to filter.
@@tictoon the yes/no thing is not as robust because it would require setting/un-setting it for every room. The best solution would be an intelligent way to check for NO furniture instances in a room and filter out that way, because new rooms with no furniture or room with furniture later removed would self-filter.
@@HerbHalstead Correct, I just think that the work to implement a solution would outpace the ease of the yes/no solution. And I don't mean it to be robust, but just a quick and dirty way to get the job done.
Agreed with your filtering idea, just seems complex.
Embedded schedules started in which Revit version?
2024 i think