Project Browser
Part of the Revit interface that shows a logical hierarchy for all views, schedules, sheets,
families, groups, and linked Revit models in the current project.
For more information, see
Project Browser
on page 55.
Project North
The top of the view in the drawing area. When producing solar studies, change the view
orientation from Project North to True North to create accurate sunlight and shadow patterns for the project.
See
Shared Positioning
on page 1230.
project parameters
User-defined fields that you add to multiple categories of elements, sheets, or views in
a project. These parameters are specific to the project and cannot be shared with other projects.
For example, you can create a project parameter named Approved By for views. In the properties for each
view, you can enter a value for this parameter to indicate who approved the view.
You can use project parameters in multi-category or single-category schedules. However, you cannot use
project parameters in tags for model elements.
Compare with
shared parameters
on page 1454. For more information, see
Project Parameters
on page 447.
project standards
The settings used in a project that you want to apply to another project. Project standards
include family types, line weights, materials, view templates, and object styles. See
Transferring Project
Standards
on page 438.
project template
A set of initial conditions for a project. Revit Architecture provides several templates, and
you can create your own templates. Any new project based on a template inherits all families, settings (such
as units, fill patterns, line styles, line weights, and view scales), and geometry from the template. Templates
use the file extension RTE.
See
Creating a Custom Project Template
on page 437.
project view
A representation of a building model. A Revit project file contains a database of information
about a building model, and a project view is one way of looking at that information. Also called a view.
The Project Browser lists the views available for a project. These can include floor plans, ceiling plans,
elevations, sections, detail views, drafting views, 3D views, walkthrough views, legend views, schedules,
renderings, and sheets.
For more information, see
Project Views
on page 79.
projection line style
A graphic style applied to an element when a view displays the element, so that you
are seeing a representation of its exterior surface. (Compare with
cut line style
on page 1386.)
For the projection line style of an element, you can specify the line weight, color, and fill pattern. See
Modifying Object Styles
on page 484.
property
A setting that determines the appearance or behavior of an element, type, or view. Also called a
parameter.
For more information, see
Element Properties Dialog
on page 75 and
View Properties
on page 210.
property line
The boundary of a plot of land or the site for a building project.
For more information, see
Property Lines
on page 899.
1440 | Glossary
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