














Define the visibility, colors, and line styles of the various parts of the alignment.
Transcript
00:05
Alignment styles control how alignments are displayed in your model.
00:10
They define the visibility,
00:12
colors and line styles of the various parts of an alignment.
00:17
Each alignment can be assigned a style and the style can be changed at any time.
00:23
For example,
00:24
we often want to have a different style shown whilst we are designing our alignment
00:28
perhaps with some clear bright colors.
00:31
But then when we want to plot these on a drawing,
00:33
we might be using color based plotting.
00:36
And so we will change the style to show the colors for plotting.
00:40
So we'd have one style for designing with
00:43
and a different style for drawing production.
00:47
We're going to create an alignment style
00:49
that is suitable for using whilst designing
00:53
in the settings, tab expand alignment
00:56
and then expand alignment styles.
01:00
When we create new styles,
01:01
we often use an existing style as a template as it already has some of the settings.
01:06
We want,
01:07
we're going to use the layout style and make a copy of it,
01:12
rename your new style to design style.
01:15
You can also give it a description if you wish
01:19
we could continue to make changes in this style.
01:22
But if we save it now and apply it to our alignment.
01:25
Then we can make changes to the style and see the result of our edits,
01:30
click OK to save the style and then apply
01:33
your new style to the Sycamore heights alignment.
01:38
Go back to the settings tab
01:40
and edit your new style
01:44
in the style. There is a design tab which defines the grip edit behavior for curves,
01:51
we'll set the radio snap value to 10.
01:55
I'm going to label the curve on the alignment
01:57
so that you can see the grip edit behavior
02:01
with this set.
02:02
When I make a grip edit on a curve, the grip will snap to an even 10 ft radius
02:08
back in the style. Go to the markers tab.
02:12
Here you can see a list of geometry positions for the alignment
02:16
and we can define markers to be drawn at those positions.
02:21
I can show you the markers in the drawing and
02:24
you can see that they're very small and don't really show
02:28
we need to edit these to make them visible at all. Drawing scales,
02:33
click on the edit button on the point of intersection row for the P point marker.
02:39
In the pick marker style, click on the edit button again.
02:45
In the marker style,
02:46
we'll change the size options from use size in absolute units to use drawing scale
02:52
and set the units to 0.1.
02:55
This will make the marker annotative and it will
02:57
resize so that it's 0.1 of an inch when plotted
03:01
regardless of the scale of the plot.
03:04
When I apply that to the style, you can see the marker shows in the drawing.
03:09
We'll repeat this for the alignment geometry marker,
03:12
but we'll set the size for this to 0.05.
03:17
Click apply to see these on the alignment
03:21
at the bottom of the Marcus tab are the settings for an alignment direction arrow
03:26
in here, you can define the arrow style and size
03:31
set. The size options
03:32
to use drawing scale
03:34
and set the value to 0.2.
03:37
To see the arrow go to the display tab
03:40
and turn on the arrow using the light bulb.
03:44
The fit options for the arrow control. What happens if the line segment is too short,
03:49
the arrow can be emitted
03:50
or shrink or be forced to be drawn.
03:54
Now go to the display tab.
03:57
This tab controls the display of alignment entities in different view directions,
04:02
plan
04:03
model 3d or section
04:07
for each sub entity,
04:08
line curve, etc.
04:10
You can set the visibility layer,
04:13
color,
04:14
line type, line type scale and line weight.
04:19
When we turn off the visibility, we are hiding that entity in the display
04:24
independently from its layer setting.
04:28
If a sub entity is assigned a specific layer,
04:31
we then have the option of controlling visibility by style or by layer.
04:36
The line set the color to yellow,
04:40
for curves,
04:41
set the color to red
04:45
and for spiral
04:46
set the color to magenta.
04:49
This allows us to easily identify where different entities change.
04:55
Using the shift key select line curve and spiral
05:00
set the line weight for these three
05:03
to 0.3
05:06
turn off the arrow visibility. As we don't want to see arrows on the alignment
05:10
note the layer for the line extension,
05:13
we want to set the same layer for the tangent extensions,
05:17
C
05:18
dash road dash line dash
05:20
extension,
05:23
select all of the extensions and change the color to 253.
05:27
So they're slightly lighter.
05:31
Change the view direction to model.
05:34
You can see the lines, curves and spirals are set to be visible when viewing in 3D.
05:41
Let me show you what this means.
05:44
Here, I am viewing the alignment together with the surface in the object viewer.
05:48
You can see that the alignment is only displaying in two D as it has no elevations.
05:54
There's really not much point viewing it in 3D.
05:57
So in the model view of the style, we'll turn all the visibility off
06:03
in the section view direction. We'll only see a marker for the alignment,
06:08
set, the marker color to red,
06:11
click. OK. To save the changes to the style,
06:14
we can now apply the style to all of our alignments.
00:05
Alignment styles control how alignments are displayed in your model.
00:10
They define the visibility,
00:12
colors and line styles of the various parts of an alignment.
00:17
Each alignment can be assigned a style and the style can be changed at any time.
00:23
For example,
00:24
we often want to have a different style shown whilst we are designing our alignment
00:28
perhaps with some clear bright colors.
00:31
But then when we want to plot these on a drawing,
00:33
we might be using color based plotting.
00:36
And so we will change the style to show the colors for plotting.
00:40
So we'd have one style for designing with
00:43
and a different style for drawing production.
00:47
We're going to create an alignment style
00:49
that is suitable for using whilst designing
00:53
in the settings, tab expand alignment
00:56
and then expand alignment styles.
01:00
When we create new styles,
01:01
we often use an existing style as a template as it already has some of the settings.
01:06
We want,
01:07
we're going to use the layout style and make a copy of it,
01:12
rename your new style to design style.
01:15
You can also give it a description if you wish
01:19
we could continue to make changes in this style.
01:22
But if we save it now and apply it to our alignment.
01:25
Then we can make changes to the style and see the result of our edits,
01:30
click OK to save the style and then apply
01:33
your new style to the Sycamore heights alignment.
01:38
Go back to the settings tab
01:40
and edit your new style
01:44
in the style. There is a design tab which defines the grip edit behavior for curves,
01:51
we'll set the radio snap value to 10.
01:55
I'm going to label the curve on the alignment
01:57
so that you can see the grip edit behavior
02:01
with this set.
02:02
When I make a grip edit on a curve, the grip will snap to an even 10 ft radius
02:08
back in the style. Go to the markers tab.
02:12
Here you can see a list of geometry positions for the alignment
02:16
and we can define markers to be drawn at those positions.
02:21
I can show you the markers in the drawing and
02:24
you can see that they're very small and don't really show
02:28
we need to edit these to make them visible at all. Drawing scales,
02:33
click on the edit button on the point of intersection row for the P point marker.
02:39
In the pick marker style, click on the edit button again.
02:45
In the marker style,
02:46
we'll change the size options from use size in absolute units to use drawing scale
02:52
and set the units to 0.1.
02:55
This will make the marker annotative and it will
02:57
resize so that it's 0.1 of an inch when plotted
03:01
regardless of the scale of the plot.
03:04
When I apply that to the style, you can see the marker shows in the drawing.
03:09
We'll repeat this for the alignment geometry marker,
03:12
but we'll set the size for this to 0.05.
03:17
Click apply to see these on the alignment
03:21
at the bottom of the Marcus tab are the settings for an alignment direction arrow
03:26
in here, you can define the arrow style and size
03:31
set. The size options
03:32
to use drawing scale
03:34
and set the value to 0.2.
03:37
To see the arrow go to the display tab
03:40
and turn on the arrow using the light bulb.
03:44
The fit options for the arrow control. What happens if the line segment is too short,
03:49
the arrow can be emitted
03:50
or shrink or be forced to be drawn.
03:54
Now go to the display tab.
03:57
This tab controls the display of alignment entities in different view directions,
04:02
plan
04:03
model 3d or section
04:07
for each sub entity,
04:08
line curve, etc.
04:10
You can set the visibility layer,
04:13
color,
04:14
line type, line type scale and line weight.
04:19
When we turn off the visibility, we are hiding that entity in the display
04:24
independently from its layer setting.
04:28
If a sub entity is assigned a specific layer,
04:31
we then have the option of controlling visibility by style or by layer.
04:36
The line set the color to yellow,
04:40
for curves,
04:41
set the color to red
04:45
and for spiral
04:46
set the color to magenta.
04:49
This allows us to easily identify where different entities change.
04:55
Using the shift key select line curve and spiral
05:00
set the line weight for these three
05:03
to 0.3
05:06
turn off the arrow visibility. As we don't want to see arrows on the alignment
05:10
note the layer for the line extension,
05:13
we want to set the same layer for the tangent extensions,
05:17
C
05:18
dash road dash line dash
05:20
extension,
05:23
select all of the extensions and change the color to 253.
05:27
So they're slightly lighter.
05:31
Change the view direction to model.
05:34
You can see the lines, curves and spirals are set to be visible when viewing in 3D.
05:41
Let me show you what this means.
05:44
Here, I am viewing the alignment together with the surface in the object viewer.
05:48
You can see that the alignment is only displaying in two D as it has no elevations.
05:54
There's really not much point viewing it in 3D.
05:57
So in the model view of the style, we'll turn all the visibility off
06:03
in the section view direction. We'll only see a marker for the alignment,
06:08
set, the marker color to red,
06:11
click. OK. To save the changes to the style,
06:14
we can now apply the style to all of our alignments.