Posts Tagged ‘RefManager’

Four problems users have with MicroStation

Wednesday, 19 December 2012

And four solutions!

Have you ever had difficulty importing text from Microsoft Word or tables from Excel into MicroStation with the correct text justification, tabs and spacing intact?

Have you ever opened a design file and discovered that one or more reference files are not attached due to messed up reference file attachment paths?

Have you ever needed to make changes to some text in hundreds of design files, requiring someone to open each file, one at a time, just to change a few lines?

Have you ever had a design file added to a project requiring you to now renumber a large portion of the files in the project?

All of these situations can be frustrating and time-consuming.

Is it frustrating not being able to import spreadsheet and word processing data with the correct formatting?
What do MicroStation users do when they need to import text or spreadsheets (large or small) into their design files with perfect formatting?

Just highlight and copy your Excel data (or word-processing text) to make it ready for Microsoft Office Importer to paste into MicroStation. The above is a simple example. In actual fact, Microsoft Office Importer can handle massive spreadsheets and documents (including those with very complex formatting).

Using MicroStation’s native Paste and Paste Special functions, users often find that their spreadsheets and Word documents become nothing like they used to be. Also, what if you need to paste a bill of materials (or a schedule) into a design file and keep a link to the original spreadsheet? The handling is as simple as this:

Microsoft Office Importer is easy to use. Just click the “Paste” icon to paste the contents of the clipboard into your design file.

  1. Open your Excel spreadsheet or Word document and copy to the clipboard whatever you want placed into MicroStation.
  2. Load MicroStation and open the design file you want to import data into.
  3. Microsoft Office Importer will auto-load and be ready for you to just press the <Paste Clipboard Contents> button. (Or if you don’t yet have Microsoft Office Importer, just give Axiom a call.)
  4. Now data-click anywhere on the design plane to make your paste.

When you paste data using <i>Microsoft Office Importer</i>, all the data comes in with perfect formatting (even on spreadsheets a hundred times the size of the above). Plus Microsoft Office Importer does it all in one paste.

That’s it. Problem solved.

Messed up reference file attachments paths?
A customer from a large engineering firm once called me and said that over the weekend, the IT department had changed a server drive letter from “H:” to “I:”, which was no big deal to the people in the IT department. However, it was a big deal to my friend on the other end of the line, as this “minor change” broke every single reference attachment in all their projects — totaling over ten thousand design files. Also, for some reason beyond his control, it was not going to be possible to change the drive letter back. This story ended happily, however. I told him how to perform the steps below with RefManager™ and it solved his whole problem. Now I’ll share this solution with you.

To make a simple example, we’ll say that all your design files were moved from the “H:” drive to the “I:” drive, without any changes to the folder structure. Here’s how to fix that problem:

  1. Open MicroStation and choose RefManager for V8 from your Axiom menu.
  2. Choose “Modify Reference File Attachments” from RefManager’s “Action:” option button. The “Modify Reference File Attachments” box will open and the “Attachment Names” category will be selected by default.
  3. In the “From:” field, enter the old drive letter, “H:” (without the quote marks).
  4. In the “To:” field, enter the new drive letter, “I:” (without the quote marks).
  5. In the “Apply to:” field, choose “Only Vector Reference Files”.
  6. In the example above, the user has told RefManager to change the drive letter stored in his reference attachments from “H:” to “I:”. The user can run this modification on multiple master design files, easily changing all his reference attachments in one easy job.

  7. Press <Close> to close the “Modify Reference File Attachments” box.
  8. In the main RefManager dialog box, press the <Select> button next to the “Master Files:” field. Then select the master files whose reference attachments you want to process. When done, press <OK> to return to the main RefManager dialog box.
  9. Press <Start>. RefManager will replace “H:” drive with “I:” drive in any vector reference attachments in which a path containing “H:” drive is stored. Case (such as an upper-case “H” or a lower-case “h”) is unimportant as this command performs case-insensitive text substitution by default.

It’s as easy as that. When RefManager is done, press the <Display Report> button to get a detailed report of what RefManager did.

Now all your vector reference attachments that had a saved path containing “H:” drive (or “h:” drive) have been changed to point to “I:” drive. If it was any easier, it’d be magic.

Keep in mind the example above is a simple one. RefManager can handle all manner of complex modifications, regardless of why things got all messed up in the first place.

Have you ever spent hours making repetitive changes to some text throughout hundreds of design files?
The need to find and replace various pieces of text throughout a set of design files is something that happens all the time for any number of reasons. Whether it’s making a date change on every sheet in a project or replacing the prefix on every part identification number displayed in thousands of cells throughout a large set of design files, it’s inevitable that changes will be needed. When you have to process lots of files or make lots of different changes, it can be time-consuming, tedious and error-prone.

Say you discover that thousands of text elements scattered throughout an entire set of project files use the words “Street”, “Drive” and “Avenue”. They were all supposed to have been abbreviated but they’ve all been spelled out instead. This “oops” could leave you with a time-consuming, profit-eating ordeal. Fortunately, there’s an easy and quick way to fix this.

Below are the steps:

  1. Open MicroStation and launch Global File Changer from the Axiom pull-down menu.
  2. Open the Modify Text custom dialog box by selecting “Custom|Modify Text…”.
  3. Select the “Replace Text” tab on the “Modify Text” dialog box.
  4. The <String Format> button can be set to either “Wildcard” or “Regex”. “Regex” is short for “Regular Expression” which is an advanced way for matching specific patterns of text strings. For instance, if you wanted to find the text strings “AG22Street” and “AG33Revision” but not “AG44Ramp” you could use a regular expression that would enable you to find just the first two and exclude the last one. This allows for more sophisticated search and replace functions to be performed in a single operation. For this example, we will just use “Wildcard”.
  5. The “Replace Text” tab gives you the ability to set multiple search strings and their replacement values.

  6. Enter the text value you are searching for in the “Search String” field and what you want it replaced with in the “Replacement String” field.
  7. Click the <Add> button to add it to the list of replacement combinations.
  8. Repeat steps 5 and 6 for each search and replace combination you want to make.
  9. After they are all entered, click the <OK> button and you will be prompted to save this list of changes. Save the file with any name and location you want. (This is so you can use it later if you like.)
  10. You will be returned to Global File Changer’s main dialog box, where all you have left to do is choose the files you want to process and click the <Start> button to make the replacements you just defined to every file in the list automatically.

Just click <Start> and Global File Changer will replace every matching text element with the new replacement text in all the selected design files.

Within just a few minutes, the text replacements will be complete in all the targeted design files.

How do you quickly renumber 237 sheets?
Imagine that your project is due out on Monday. Your project team spent the weekend putting the final touches on the job. All the 237 sheets have been plotted for the final check. Everything appears to be in order and the tension is starting to ease. Then all of sudden a blood-curdling scream resonates throughout the office. The sheet numbers are wrong. The sheet total is off by one on every sheet and every sheet number higher than 17 is off by one.

Now raise your hand if you would manually open all 237 sheets to edit text? That is just how it has always been done and it works just fine as long you want to spend the entire afternoon editing text in 237 separate sheet files. If you can modify one sheet in one minute, stay on task, not get any phone calls, and not make any mistakes, then we are talking three hours and 57 minutes just to modify the text.

With Title Block Manager, you don’t have to open up each design file individually to make changes to your title blocks. Title Block Manager allows you to quickly update your design files in bulk from changes made in Excel or Access.

You can break it up and give sections to different people to hurry things along. That could make it go faster, or it could just make things worse and increase the chances for error. Let’s round it up to four man-hours just for editing the design files. I don’t remember the last time that I had four hours uninterrupted.

Fortunately, there is another option. It takes about five minutes:

  1. Open MicroStation and start Title Block Administrator.™
  2. With Title Block Administrator loaded, click on the <Select…> button next the “Database” field. Navigate to and select your Microsoft Excel (or Access) database.
  3. You can quickly and easily renumber all 237 title blocks at one time.

  4. Click on the <Edit Database> button on the Title Block Administrator main dialog box. This will open the database selected in step 2 above.
  5. Increment the values in the “Sheet” column to accommodate the renumbering. Save and close the database.
  6. Press the <Select > button next to the “Design Files:” field in the main Title Block Administrator dialog box. This will load the “Choose Files to Process” dialog box that allows you to select the sheet files for processing.
  7. Set “Action:” to <Update selected files from database>. Click <Start>.
  8. Check your e-mail, get some coffee and a few minutes later the job is complete.

Which scenario sounds better — the one that takes you four hours or the one that takes about five minutes?

Putting it all together
We have found that MicroStation users often come across more than one of the above scenarios. This is one of the reasons why we made sure that all four of the products in this article are included in MicroStation Acceleration Garage, a cost-efficient package of nearly all of Axiom’s time-saving software products and e-learning courses.

Tips & Tricks — Replace the reference file paths in all of your sheet files at the same time!

Wednesday, 14 October 2009

By Rick Sewell

Have you ever completed a project and then found out that the client needs some of the references saved with a different path? The purpose of this article is to show you how to replace the reference file path saved in your sheet files — while retaining all of your varying reference file names — in just minutes.

  1. Load RefManager from your “Axiom” menu in MicroStation.
  2. On the main dialog box, set “Action:” to “Modify Reference File Attachments”.
  3. RefManager has a variety of features, such as “Modify Reference file Attachments”, which allow you to solve any MicroStation reference file problem fast!

  4. The “Modify Reference File Attachments” dialog box now appears with the “Category” already set to “Attachment Names”. Now, set the “Component:” to “Full Path”.
  5. Change the “Method:” to “Replace Entire String”. (The “From:” field will become inactive.)
  6. In the “To:” field, enter the full new path that you want to use. It’s okay if the new path only exists on your client’s network.
  7. RefManager allows you to change any or all of the components of a reference file path in all of your sheet files at once.

  8. Press the (Close) button to return to the main dialog box.
  9. Press the (Attachments…) button.
  10. On the “Filter Reference File Attachments By” dialog box, click on “File Name” in the Category list.
  11. In the “String:” field, enter the names of the reference files whose paths you want to change in your sheets. Put a semi-colon (“;”) between each file name.

    The reference file attachment filter allows you to very specifically define which reference file attachments will be modified. This kind of pinpoint accuracy is part of what makes RefManager so powerful.

    Note: This limits the string substitution RefManager is going to perform to only the reference files you specify. This is so you control exactly which attachments get this new path. For example:

    Say there are a whole bunch of different reference files attached to your sheet files, and these reference files are all attached using that same path you are going to change. However, you only want to change the path for the attached reference files named “construct.dgn” and “main.bdr”. In the “String:” field, enter:

    construct.dgn;main.bdr

    This way, only “construct.dgn” and “main.bdr” will have their paths changed.

    It is also possible to use wildcards in the “String:” field so as to allow a broader range of reference file names to be processed. For example, “main*.*” would find and process files such as: main.dgn, main.bdr, main-border.dg1.

  12. Press the (Close) button to return to the main RefManager dialog box.
  13. Use the “Master Files:” field to tell RefManager which sheet files to process. You can use — like “*.— if you like. Or use the
    button to choose files graphically. You can choose as many files as you want and process them all in one job with RefManager.
  14. Press to process your files!
  15. Now — in just — all of the files you are processing will reference “construct.dgn” and “main.bdr” with the new path!

MicroStation Today — October 2009 (Volume 16, Issue 10)

Wednesday, 14 October 2009

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MicroStation Today — October 2009 (Volume 16, Issue 10)

Download a PDF version of this issue.

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MicroStation Today — June 2009(Volume 16, Issue 6)

Monday, 1 June 2009

Click here for back issues.

MicroStation Today — June 2009 (Volume 16, Issue 6)

Download a PDF version of this issue.

To read the pages above, download Adobe®‘s free Acrobat Reader®, if not already installed in your computer.

MicroStation Today — April 2009(Volume 16, Issue 4)

Wednesday, 1 April 2009

Click here for back issues.

MicroStation Today — August 2009 (Volume 16, Issue 4)

Download a PDF version of this issue.

To read the pages above, download Adobe®‘s free Acrobat Reader®, if not already installed in your computer.

Multiple string operations added to new RefManager interface.

Sunday, 7 September 2008

Latest release enhances RefManager’s most frequently used feature.

Clearwater, Florida, USA — RefManager, already known to address just about every known reference file issue imaginable, has just been upgraded with new features. The new release is designed to make modifying reference file attachment names easier than ever.

Per Axiom Executive VP Operations Lee Geer, “The most frequently used RefManager feature is modifying reference file attachment names. Because of this, we made it a goal to make this feature easier to use. That goal was certainly met in the most recent RefManager release.”

Here are examples of both the old and new “Attachment Names” dialog box:

The new RefManager dialog box has been streamlined to allow users to modify reference file names and paths with fewer mouse clicks and less typing.

In the old version, users had to separate old and new strings on the same line with a pipe (|) like this:

The prior version of RefManager required a pipe (|) symbol to separate old and new file path references. This produced somewhat messy entry field.

In the new version, users can choose the applicable component from a pull-down list and then enter their old and new string values in the new “From:” and “To:” fields.

Among other improvements, he newest version of RefManager separates the “From” and “To” fields so that it is a much cleaner and intuitive interface.

Another change is that for the first time ever, users can do multiple string operations at the same time. Instead of specifying just a path to replace, they can do a path and a file name and make other changes too — all in a single run of the program. Axiom has also included a new <Test> button feature.

This section of the dialog box is where string operations are added. Users have the ability to add as many as they like before executing them.

By using this new feature, users can compare the new and old reference file attachment settings and get a report on exactly what the resulting changes will be in their reference files before they commit to the change.

For example: “CAD manager A” has a reference file attached called “new.dgn”. The reference file name is ok, but the stored reference file path is wrong. If his “From:” and “To:” fields look like this:

Then his <Test> report will look like this:

After clicking on <Test>, a report is generated showing all changes that will be made once the string operations are executed.

Once he has reviewed the report, he can change his specifications and retest or if everything looks good he can go ahead with the changes.

Per RefManager’s Product Manager, Steve Palmer, “When projects get moved from one directory to another or from one server drive to another, MicroStation users turn to RefManager to modify the reference file attachment paths. Over time, RefManager’s file name modification tools have evolved to encompass logical names, descriptions and most recently, model names. All of these strings — and practically every other reference file setting — can be manipulated with RefManager. So take a fresh look at RefManager and see what it can do now.”

Tips & Tricks — Help! I need to turn off reference file display.

Sunday, 7 September 2008

By Rick Sewell, Customer Support
Clearwater, Florida, USA — Large MicroStation projects tend to be broken up into multiple design files by discipline. You might have one set of designers working on plumbing, another set on electrical and so on. Then, a corresponding file from each discipline is referenced to a master file to complete the picture for that one set of files. Of course, that one finished set of files is only one of many such sets needed to complete the project — but normally each set of files is handled in the same fashion.

Now, what happens when you need to print out a copy of this master design file to give to the electrician who will be responsible for the wiring? If you print it with every discipline’s details, that electrician is going to get the printed file and not have any idea what most of the stuff in it is. This problem is easily fixed! Just turn off the display of each inapplicable reference file in the master design file and print it again. Fast and easy, right? Sure, unless there are two hundred master files to print.

The need to turn off the display of specific reference files in multiple master files is very common. This is why it is a frequently used feature in RefManager.

How to turn off the display for a specific reference file in many files
Ok, so we’ve got our set of 200 MicroStation design files containing “plumbing.dgn” as a reference file. I’m going to walk you through exactly how to turn off the display for the “plumbing.dgn” for all files.

  • Load RefManager from the Axiom pull-down menu.

Think of this dialob box as RefManager’s front door. Starting with this box, you can make all kinds of modifications to any number of design files on your system. RefManager is a great MicroStation time-saver.

  • In the main dialog box, set “Command” to “Modify Reference File Attachments”. This will automatically load the “Modify Reference File Attachments” dialog box.

Change any reference file setting with the “Modify Reference File Attachments” command.

  • In the “Modify Reference File Attachments” dialog box, set the “Category” to “Vector Settings”.
  • The very top option is “Display”. Click on the menu next to it and you will have three choices, “No Change”, “Turn On” and “Turn Off”. Select “Turn Off”. Then press <Close> to go back to the main RefManager dialog box.

Right now, if you were to press the <Start> button, you would end up turning off the display of all reference files. This is not the desired result. So we need to set a filter to turn off the display only for “plumbing.dgn”.

  • From the RefManager main dialog box, press the <Attachments…> button. This will load the “Filter Reference File Attachments By” dialog box.

Type the name of the reference file that you want to process in the “String” field. [Note: You can specify multiple reference files to process by entering multiple filenames in the “String” field, using semicolons as separators.

  • Ensure the “Category” is set to “File Name”. In the “String” field, enter the name of the reference file to be processed – in this case, “plumbing.dgn”. Then press <Close> to go back to the main RefManager dialog box.

With RefManager, you can select as many design files as you want to process.

  • In the main dialog box is the “Master Files” field. Press the <Select…> button to bring up the “Choose Files to Process” dialog box. Click the <Browse for Files> button. You can now navigate to and select as many files to process as you want. Remember that the files you are selecting to process aren’t the reference files themselves, but the master files containing the reference files that have the attributes you want to change. When you have selected all of the master files you want to process, press <OK> to return to the main RefManager dialog box.
  • Press <Start> to process your files.

When the process is complete, the reference file display attribute will be turned off for “plumbing.dgn” in all the master files that you processed. You’re now ready to start printing all of the files for the electrician!

Project Impossible – CAD manager looks for something he doesn’t want to find

Thursday, 7 August 2008

Clearwater, Florida, USA — [Editor's note: The following is based on a true story. Names and some details have been changed to protect the customer's identity.]

John opened design file number 157 to give it one last check for errors before sending it off to his customer. He checks the title block data… seems fine. Borders? Check. Global Origin? Check. Proper views turned on? Check. Looking good … wait a sec. What’s this?

Something about the font in the title block catches his eye. A mild sort of panic feeling begins to well up, ever so slightly, in his stomach as John grabs a copy of the client’s specifications. Holding the specs alongside the file, John spots an error. Then another. Then it hits him. His mild panic swells into that dreadful feeling of terror that sweeps through one’s body when first realizing something major may be wrong. Can it be? John opens another of the project’s design files (number 644) and carefully studies the fonts, looking for something he hopes not to find. His head rotating furiously back-and-forth between the spec and the design, John continues his ill-fated inspection. Suddenly, he freezes. His turning head becomes a stare in the direction of the spec, without actually seeing it. John hits that moment when something you don’t want to see is yet undeniably present. You know the one — where you just freeze for a moment dimly hoping that this isn’t happening and that perhaps if you stay still enough, long enough, it will somehow go away. Of course it never does. In John’s case, this CAD manager has just discovered that this error affected every one of the 2,552 design files in this project — and it was due in less than a week.

After a few moments, John gradually breaks free from the grip of shock and begins looking over the design file some more. After some more study, he finds it wasn’t just the font that was wrong. Random levels were turned off, there were incorrect reference files attached to some files, there were wrong line weights and the list went on. How could this happen? Had they been using an out-dated copy of the client’s spec during most of the design process? John didn’t know and at the moment, finding out why it happened was not first on his list of things to do. The first thing had to be fixing it all before he lost his job. Okay, well maybe he wouldn’t get fired over this, but it certainly would tarnish his reputation and cost his company a lot of money. But there was no way to correct this many errors in that many files without hundreds of man-hours. Hundreds. Maybe more. Maybe much more.

John had lost track of the time. His first indication of this was when he noticed he was alone in the office except for Nolan, the IT guy who makes updates on the Network at night when traffic is low. Thinking it was probably too late to reach anyone by phone, John sits down at his computer and shoots off an e-mail to Axiom. He wasn’t sure what to expect, with his long list of problems and the short period of time in which to complete them. But why not?
John had eight major things he had to solve on this project of twenty-five hundred files.
The next morning, he received an answer:

“Dear John,
“I looked at your account and noticed that you already own MicroStation Productivity Toolkit. Every problem you describe can be handled quickly and easily with tools that you already have. I have listed the correct application below each of your problems. Give me a call and I can walk you through it.

“Problem: A new reference file needs to be attached to approximately 185 master design files.
Application: RefManager

“Problem: A new logical name needs to be used for a specific reference file in all of the master design files in the project.
Solution: RefManager

“Problem: The ‘Locate Lock’ setting needs to be turned off for all reference files in the project.
Solution: RefManager

“Problem: Various levels need to be turned off and others need to be turned on in nearly all 2,552 project design files.
Solution: Global File Changer

“Problem: The ‘Line Weights’ View Attribute has to be turned on in the majority of the project design files.
Solution: Global File Changer

“Problem: Extra digits need to be added to the end of the drawing number listed in every master file.
Solution: Global File Changer

“Problem: The font in the title blocks needs to be changed in every master design file in the project.
Solution: Global File Changer

“All of the work can be done in batch, of course. It shouldn’t take more than a few hours to fix everything.”

John grew more and more hopeful with every line. He already owned everything he needed to get the job done. What’s more, his past experience with the tools in MicroStation Productivity Toolkit was that they were fast, accomplishing tasks on hundreds or thousands of files at the same time.

Using the V8 version of MicroStation Productivity Toolkit and with the help of Axiom customer support, John completed all of the above tasks and got the project delivered on time and to the customer’s specifications. It only took the use of two of Toolkit’s 17 software programs to solve all of the problems on his list.

Saving time, saving money and getting the job done

Saturday, 7 June 2008

Clearwater, Florida, USA — Maybe you’ve heard stories of Axiom’s time-saving MicroStation utilities salvaging the “unsalvageable” design file, or completing 200 man-hours of work in a matter of minutes.

Making MicroStation work easier, faster and more efficiently puts more money in the bank and more time in your weekend. Isn’t that where they belong?

Now it’s time to hear it straight from the individual owners of MicroStation Productivity Toolkit:

Doing weeks of work in three hours
“Last week I was asked to ‘convert’ approximately 200 drawings from an existing design for re-use in a new project. The task required all existing reference and mark numbers on all drawings be re-mapped to new project numbers, including a few commonly used permutations.

“Naturally, the project manager had left it to the last minute to assign this task, and was worried that he wouldn’t achieve the first submission date — especially after he’d unsuccessfully tried to find and replace the numbers manually in a trial-run of ten drawings.

“He was skeptical when I told him I could do all of them this afternoon if he wanted. All I required was an Excel spreadsheet with the old and new numbers. “Once I had the spreadsheet, it took me 30 minutes to re-format the data for Global File Changer to import, and a couple of hours for it to process all 200 drawings — less than three hours in all. To do this manually would probably have taken us weeks!

“Now, instead of being slightly behind schedule, his project is a few weeks ahead of schedule!

“This is just one example of the many tasks I’ve been able to use MicroStation Productivity Toolkit for — I highly recommend it for any organization processing large numbers of DGNs or DWGs.” C.A.

Increasing productivity with no side-effects
“Just to let you know, it is working perfectly. Thanks for your help.

“The replace cell is also working fine, it’s impressive to see that the cells update without losing the tag values.

“Most often with MicroStation, I find that something else goes wrong when trying to fix another [problem] or that the fix available is limited in scope or incomplete by nature.

“It is quite amazing how Axiom tools can handle all the oddities and offer perfect solutions without side effects.” M.B.

Doing the work of six draftsmen in three hours
“I love it! It’s very easy to use. I did the work of six draftsmen in three hours. I saved 15 to 16 hours of work. This tool can be used so many ways. I want to get it for my whole department. I really, really like this tool. And I got excellent help down there [at Axiom]. I called in and they helped me a lot. You have a good team down there. We also use FileFixer all the time, everyone does.” D.D.

Meeting (or beating) project deadlines
“I want to thank you and your staff for your exceptional service in getting the V7 and V8 Office Importer to me at the drop of a hat. It made a big difference and the job went out on time. Great tool. “Thank you for all of your efforts and I will be in touch.” R.O.

Making translations from MicroStation to AutoCAD a cakewalk
“The majority of our projects have AutoCAD deliverables and have to be translated from USTN [MicroStation] to AutoCAD. We could never accomplish this without the Axiom Toolkit. Can’t do without it.” D.D.

Handling messed up design files before it’s too late
“We mainly use the FileFixer product, and we use it to fix corrupt files and to make sure files are clean when we send them out of the office. I can not measure the financial savings of the product has given us, but I can say that it has saved us time when fixing corrupt files. This can be much quicker than retrieving from our archives.” J.H.

Making MicroStation work easier
“We use the Office Importer and RefManager very often. Even if those two products were the only tools used, I would be totally satisfied.” D.L

Changing 1,300 reference attachments at once
“Thank you very much for your time… I now love RefManager. I wasn’t looking forward to changing 1,300 reference attachments manually.” C.S.

Changing hundreds of drawings in two minutes
“I changed 241 drawings in about two minutes! Thanks!” D.W.

Fixing misbehaving design files
“We have utilized the Axiom tools set since [MicroStation] version SE and are happy with the results. Although we do not use it on a daily basis, we have used it most often for fixing designs that exhibit bad behavior and RefManager for fixing reference file attachment locations, aliases and settings.” J.L.

How to win the war on MicroStation terror

Wednesday, 7 May 2008

MicroStation users overcome fearsome productivity barriers!

Clearwater, Florida, USA — Have you ever encountered a situation that made you want to send an SOS?

  • You’re in the trenches. 250 design files and their reference files must be submitted tomorrow and you notice all the links to the reference file attachments are broken.
  • You think you are done and notice that your client’s company name is misspelled in 300 design files.
  • After taking hours to import a spreadsheet containing the costs of all the materials involved in a project, you discover the spreadsheet has been updated and has almost completely changed. Now you have to go back and re-import!
  • You are ready to submit the design file to your client. Suddenly the system crashes and an error message comes in: “Unable to open design file. Please contact your local site administrator blah blah blah…”

Should you send up the white flag? No — you call Axiom.

Our goal, at Axiom, is to help you win the war against MicroStation production barriers. We want to help you handle MicroStation problems, save time and meet your project deadlines. Find out how others have dealt with missed deadlines, late nights, lost weekends and upset clients. In this article, we share some of our all-time favorite war stories with you.

How to save time, meet deadlines and look like a MicroStation genius as you easily handle everything that comes your way.
The tedium of repetitive manipulation of design files ties up valuable resources, consumes man-hours and devours project profits. With the tools in MicroStation Productivity Toolkit, expensive, time-consuming tasks can be a thing of the past.

Here’s what a few of our clients wanted you to know:

“Last week I was asked to convert 200 drawings from an existing design for re-use in a new project. The task required all existing references and mark numbers on all drawings be re-mapped to new project numbers. The project manager was worried that this would not be achieved by the first submission date, especially after a manual trial run of ten drawings. He was skeptical when I told him I could do all of them in one afternoon if he wanted. It took a couple of hours for Global File Changer to automatically process all 200 files, most of which time I was still productive doing other tasks. To do this manually would have taken weeks. Instead of being behind schedule, the project is a few weeks ahead of schedule!” C.A.

“[Before Microsoft Office Importer] there was a lot of time being wasted. We used to have to bring in spreadsheets one column at a time. Instead of wasting about an hour per revision, I used Microsoft Office Importer and handled the problem in four clicks of a mouse.” C.M.

“We recently had thousands of reference files that got messed up and would have taken at least two weeks to fix. RefManager fixed them automatically in four hours.” L.C.

“I now love RefManager! I wasn’t looking forward to changing 1300 reference file attachments manually.” C.S.

MicroStation quality of life
You can spare yourself the worry and aggravation of not having the tools you need to get the job done, by just having Toolkit ready in your arsenal. Our clients share how the versatility of MicroStation Productivity Toolkit relieves project anxiety:

“We started using Microsoft Office Importer on one of our larger projects and some of the Product Managers liked it so much that they started using it for the index and summaries of a lot of our smaller projects.” S.K.

“I use the tools in Toolkit every day and it’s invaluable. A problem will come up and I’ll say, ‘I bet we can solve that with Toolkit’, and we usually do.” L.C.
“Do yourself a favor and buy MicroStation Productivity Toolkit.” B. M.

Trouble getting everyone doing it right?
MicroStation Productivity Toolkit applications can be used to ensure project quality and standards — while still meeting deadlines. By submitting error-free designs on time, and meeting or exceeding your customer’s expectations, you’ll impress them and secure future business. SpecChecker (part of MicroStation Productivity Toolkit) is particularly handy for automating quality assurance checks and repairs. Here are some examples from MicroStation Productivity Toolkit owners:

“Using FileFixer and SpecChecker we are able to stop problems before they affect our schedules.” D.H.

“I’ve used SpecChecker to reorganize the symbology of elements in many of our design files. This saves me 85% of the work I would have had to do myself!” F.L.

“When dealing with lots of CAD files like I do, I don’t know how I could check all of them if I didn’t have SpecChecker.” S.A.

Save money and increase profits.
There is no better evidence of the cost-effectiveness of MicroStation Productivity Toolkit than the results owners achieve with it. MicroStation Productivity Toolkit owners explain:

“My company has a corporate Bentley license (about 30 sites) and this office was the first one to acquire Microsoft Office Importer. Every chance I get, I tell the other sites that it works and that within the first week, it paid for itself.” S.C.

“When it comes to the purchase of additional licenses of MicroStation Productivity Toolkit, money is not an issue. My guys rave about Axiom tools. Just the other day, we handled 6,000 design files with RefManager and it saved us an incredible amount of time.” M.E.

“I love FileFixer. It saves me many, many man-hours!” M.K.

FileFixer alone makes MicroStation Productivity Toolkit worth it!” R.S.