Home Design 3d Duplicate Project

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Irmgard Verzi

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Jul 16, 2024, 2:34:19 PM7/16/24
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I am experimenting with different configurations of a power supply in PSpice for TI and would therefor like to save different versions of the schematic. However, the option "Save Project As" in the "File" menu is disabled (greyed out). Is this intentionally disabled in PSpice for TI or is there some way to enable it? Is there a different way I should be going about this?

home design 3d duplicate project


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Now that I have tried "New Design" in an existing project, "Save Project As" is enabled. "New Design" opened a new schematic page, but both the original schematic page and the new one have the same title: "(SCHEMATIC 1: PAGE 1)".

While working on the second design in my project, PSPICE for TI crashed. When I reopened PSPICE, it offered to recover the project which wasn't closed properly. However, the recovered project did not contain the second design. When I once again invoked "New Design", the "File" option "Save Project As" was *not* enabled.

Meanwhile I have discovered that it isn't necessary to close the schematic page. The only requirement is that the top-level "Design Resources" node be selected in the "File" navigation tree on the left.

I created a new account and duplicated the production and design system, from my old account, to the new account. The problem is that the duplicated production is still connected with the original design system and not the duplicated one. How can I link the duplicated production with the duplicated design system without having to link every single component with the duplicated design system again, that would take 2 weeks.

w account and duplicated the production and design system, from my old account, to the new account. The problem is that the duplicated production is still connected with the original design system and not the duplicated one. How can I link the duplicated production with the duplicated design system without

This swap-style feature is broken for the most part. I have tried 20+ times in the last hour, and it never swapped out the library for the identical duplicate I created. It looks like it works, but I then checked all the components, and they still point to the previous file.

When designing a living room, a bathroom or any other room, you will probably have to reproduce some items identically. No problem! The object duplication function is here to make life easier for everyone.

By using the object duplication feature, you can save time and avoid measurement errors by replicating objects in your project. This allows you to focus on the more creative aspects of your interior design project, without having to worry about the accuracy of each object.

HomeByMe is an online 3D space planning service developed by Dassault Systmes SE. The products and services presented on the HomeByMe website are not sold by Dassault Systmes SE. They are sold by trusted partners who are solely responsible for them, as well as the information about them.

But have no fear, all you have to do at this point is quickly run to Cricut Design Space and bring up that super cute gift tag with the mermaid and copy and paste that image you designed into a new project. So you have opened up your original mermaid file from last year and simply copy and paste this image into a new Cricut Design Space project. You duplicate the mermaid from the tag and change the color and material and use it for the Birthday card. Bam! Done. Yay! Celebrate!

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I am unable to copy a folder and its subdirectories from one project to another. However, I am able to copy individual design files one at a time with the caveat they are true duplicates and not linked together. I work primarily with 8020 hardware imported as STEP files directly from their website. Once I have an object, I modify the properties to be the correct material, appearance, part number, and a description.

Currently, I have to keep a separate 8020 "library" folder for each project on which I am working with the parts I need for that specific project. I would like to have a top-level project with all of the objects I've needed historically correctly modified with their properties. The end goal is to only have to edit an object's properties once saving time and having them linked would let any edits cascade through every project.

Your proposed workaround is very close to what I need. I think maintaining a top-level library project and copying the sub-folders into each new project will work until a better solution is available. The top-level and copied directory won't stay synchronized, but that shouldn't be too much of a problem.

For a home design project, you often need to duplicate models such as metalware and houseplants, and then place them in an array. Whereas in a project for public design, you usually need to arrange groups of duplicated decoration plants as well as lines of desk and chair models such as office and theater chairs.

2. After you set a start point, you can adjust the length and direction of a ray represented by a black arrow line. The ray determines the specific direction and spacing between the furniture models to be duplicated.

As Andrew said, select a comp in the Project Panel, not in the timeline, and press Ctrl/Cmnd + D. You'll get a new comp with a number or copy added to the name. This comp is completely independent of the original one but it contains all of the same footage.

If the comp you duplicated contains other comps nested in the timeline then these nested comps must also be duplicated and their duplicates used to replace the original nested compositions in the duplicate comp. The script referred to makes t

If you select a comp in the project window and then duplicate, you will create a duplicate comp that is independent of the first. HOWEVER, if there are nested compositions within your comp, then these will remain true to their original source compositions. You may need to duplicate and replace those precomps within your duplicate comp. Or, as shown above, there's a script to automate the process.

If you look closer this script is "name your own price" so you could even enter 0$, download and try the script and if you like it and feel that the author really deserved it and feel like motivating him to spend some more time writing other useful scripts donate a fair amount later on.

If you don't feel like buying or trying you can do this the classic way and duplicate your comps and precomps and change the precomps inside to new comps with the new precomps by selecting your old precomp and alt-drag your new precomp over it. Sounds boring? It is

If the comp you duplicated contains other comps nested in the timeline then these nested comps must also be duplicated and their duplicates used to replace the original nested compositions in the duplicate comp. The script referred to makes this easy. Most projects created by new users do not have a lot of nested comps so it's not usually a big deal to do this step by hand.

If you post a screenshot of the timeline for the comp you need duplicated or better yet the flow chart we can point out exactly what needs to be duplicated in the Project panel to give you an independent duplicate composition. Duplicating a composition nested in a timeline does not give you a unique copy.

One more thing. Any time you select layers in your timeline and Pre-compose them you create a new composition that is now nested in your original. It's a good practice to arrange all pre-comps in the Project Panel into a folder with a name that lets you know where these pre-comps go. This will make the job of duplicating main comps much easier.

Often, this kind of task doesn't need to be done with making new compositions though. The new-ish feature of Master Properties in AE makes duplicating precomps obsolete for many cases. Especially when it comes to incorporating changes down the line. I've had projects in the past where Master Properties would have saved me HOURS of work doing all this duplication.

- In the original project, import the saved project - as if you were importing a common file such as an image or video - file/import - I think you'll need to create an organization folder for these imports.

This helped me with more complex projects where I had a lot of precompositions within other precompositions. But this's a short cut until there was a native After Effects way to allow independent duplication of precompositions.

This is a clean and simple way to deal with this clumsy process, I agree. This video has a great process for saving the composition cleanly, as well. It makes it easy to import only the comp you want. =6dQXFAtzZXQ

I copied all the layers/rows of the original comp I wanted to duplicate, then selected (composition>new), and pasted the components into it. Then I dragged the new comp back into my timeline from the Project and this stopped linking the two comps together. Hope that helps!

A neighbour in condo building (who happens to have a condo with the same footprint as our) is shown our condo and loves what we had done. He later emailed me and asked for a copy of our drawings so that he can do the same renovation to his unit. I decline his request, but refer him to design firm to develop a new plan customized for themselves. He then asked design firm for free copy of our plans. They declined because we had paid for those designs. However the name of the architect is given to the neighbour.

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