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revit 2010 with 2009 interface?

  • Thread starter Thread starter solenoideqq
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solenoideqq

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hello to all I wanted to know if there was a way to have the same revit interface 2009 in revit 2010 as I just don't go down with those new buttons......ringrazio in advance and greetings to all
 
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Hi, I think it's not possible. However the new dress is not bad and then inaltreantiva you can try revpac that allows you to add new commands like acad. You can try it for 30 days.
 
I think it's better to strive and familiarize yourself with the new interface. it will not be a thing to pass, like one tantum, most likely the next versions will be like this and we what we do? do we remain anchored to our small habits with so much fear of novelties? someone very important said that you don't have to be afraid to change.... I'm trying and it doesn't seem to me the end of the world, indeed, it also seems to me to take some benefit.

then that you want it to be regarding the safety plans and the new regulations on the (presumption) safety yards.... :eek::eek::eek:
 
place this image, take a look! ! !interfaccia 2009 for revit 2010. is not a photomontage!!!:cool:
 

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Sorry for those who stayed at the graphic interface (gui) of 2009 but the trend, in all windows-based software, is clear. .

from microsoft office 2007, autocad 2009, revit 2010. you go more and more towards this new leash, called "ribbon" (= tape or strip), whatever the software you use.

I have no difficulty thinking that in a few years all windows-based software will have this look.. So it's better to get used to it, and even quickly, if you don't want to stay cut out of the world before you even notice it.

I'm having a hard time getting used to the ribbon, starting with the office. but the world goes on and, as the saying "who stops is lost".

And there's also another saying that in this case there's a lot of... "The exams never end." .
:biggrin:

Hi.
Thursday
 
Sorry, I'd get used to it. but I want to know what the advantage is!
I believe a lot in keeping up to date, and every year I spend so much to update hardware and software, I believed in revit, but now I can't even make a decent rendering because "I can't keep up" and when the usual urgent work comes... I still use autocad! I read you a lot and I hoped I could make my contribution for autocad, given my very twenty-year experience. But it doesn't help! all evolved and my knowledge is obsolete :frown:
 
With autocad, I was pointing.
I bought the various books of omura and the like and down to cuff.
lisp that facilitated everything, menu with macro that still use...
on autocad 2010 I tried to resist but then I returned to my customization that I brought back for years. even with the risk of losing me some new benefit. . .
with revit I imposed myself not to touch anything. which then seems to me not to make much, apart from the paths and families.
so I'm going after version and today I try to pull straight with the new menu.
If you go to see yourself being obsolete it doesn't take anything... but that we give up like this?!? :tongue::rolleyes::finger:
 
I'm in trouble too.
also because it is not that I use revit from a life as autocad. I mean, I don't know how to say, with autocad I have some automatisms to unlock but I have a safe base of knowledge that allow me to avoid panic.
here instead... with 'the ribbon, I no longer find anything of those few certainties I had.
I planned on 2009, conscious of wrong, waiting for me to come back the courage to face 2010.
 
use (unfortunately:-)) autocad for almost twenty years, but the new interface with multifunction bar seemed much more logical than the old toolbar... the proposed functional grouping, to replace the plethora of icons all around the screen, seems intuitive and clear, and then it is strongly editable, so that in the end you personalize it with the functions you say...
Come on, once autodeskk gets something:-)
 
I completely agree, the autocad multifunction bar allows you to find the commands logically, and why not, to customize it according to the propreies needs. I recommend, for those who tend to get used to the new interface, to create their own custom work area, in which to insert the "usual commands" and a custom multifunctional bar that can be recalled with the "multifunction bar" button. this allows you to have the usual interface with the extra bar (which you can also position laterally to the right...). Of course, you have to use the latter, with the certainty of finding, in case of "emergency", the command in the usual place. according to me is a good method that allows you to get used to, so "soft" to the new interface,
bye
Miki
 

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