I am trying to rotate Revit elements about their center points. In order to do that, I need to select a Revit element and find its center point, then create a line with the coordinates at that elements center point.
My best idea to accomplish this is to wrap a Revit element in a bounding box and then find the center of that box. My problem is that I am unsure how to accomplish this.
I am using pyRevit (amazing tool) and I am stuck on how to either wrap the selected element with a bounding box or retrieve its existing bounding box.
Any help would be greatly appreciated! I am really trying to learn the Revit API and understand how everything works. I am making progress but there is a lot to unpack.
def pickobject():
from Autodesk.Revit.UI.Selection import ObjectType
#define the active Revit application and document
app = __revit__.Application
doc = __revit__.ActiveUIDocument.Document
uidoc = __revit__.ActiveUIDocument
#define a transaction variable and describe the transaction
t = Transaction(doc, 'This is my new transaction')
# Begin new transaction
t.Start()
# Select an element in Revit
picked = uidoc.Selection.PickObject(ObjectType.Element, "Select something.")
### ?????????? ###
# Get bounding box of selected element.
picked_bb = BoundingBoxXYZ(picked)
# Get max and min points of bounding box.
picked_bb_max = picked_bb.Max
picked_bb_min = picked_bb.Min
# Get center point between max and min points of bounding box.
picked_bb_center = (picked_bb_max + picked_bb_min) / 2
### ?????????? ###
# Close the transaction
t.Commit()
return picked, picked_bb_center
Thanks in advance for taking a look at what I have so far. Please let me know if anything needs further clarification!
edit:
@CyrilWaechter
I think you are right. Using LocationPoint would probably make more sense. I looked through the script you linked (thank you btw!) and I tried implementing this section in my code.
transform = doc.GetElement(picked.ElementId).GetTransform()
I am passing the ElementId through this statement but I get the error, "Wall" object has no attribute 'GetTransform'. Could you please help me understand this?
edit 2: Thanks @JeremyTammik and @CyrilWaechter, your insights helped me understand where I was going wrong. While I still feel that certain properties are ambiguous in the Revit API, I was able to get my code to execute properly. I will post the code that I was able to get working below.
Here is how I was able to solve my problem using pyRevit. This code allows you to rotate an element about its Z axis from the center of its bounding box.
To use this code, select a single Revit element and then open the Revit Python Shell. Copy and paste the code below into the Revit Python Shell notepad and click the run button. This will rotate the element by 45 degrees because the current rotateSelectedElement() argument is 45. You may change this number to any value before running.
# Import the math module to convert user input degrees to radians.
import math
# Get a list of all user selected objects in the Revit Document.
selection = [doc.GetElement(x) for x in uidoc.Selection.GetElementIds()]
# Definitions
def rotateSelectedElement(degrees_to_rotate):
from Autodesk.Revit.UI.Selection import ObjectType
#define the active Revit application and document
app = __revit__.Application
doc = __revit__.ActiveUIDocument.Document
uidoc = __revit__.ActiveUIDocument
#define a transaction variable and describe the transaction
t = Transaction(doc, 'This is my new transaction')
# Convert the user input from degrees to radians.
converted_value = float(degrees_to_rotate) * (math.pi / 180.0)
# Begin new transaction
t.Start()
# Get the first selected element from the current Revit doc.
el = selection[0].Id
# Get the element from the selected element reference
el_ID = doc.GetElement(el)
# Get the Bounding Box of the selected element.
el_bb = el_ID.get_BoundingBox(doc.ActiveView)
# Get the min and max values of the elements bounding box.
el_bb_max = el_bb.Max
el_bb_min = el_bb.Min
# Get the center of the selected elements bounding box.
el_bb_center = (el_bb_max + el_bb_min) / 2
#Create a line to use as a vector using the center location of the bounding box.
p1 = XYZ(el_bb_center[0], el_bb_center[1], 0)
p2 = XYZ(el_bb_center[0], el_bb_center[1], 1)
myLine = Line.CreateBound(p1, p2)
# Rotate the selected element.
ElementTransformUtils.RotateElement(doc, el, myLine, converted_value)
# Close the transaction
t.Commit()
# Execute
# Add the desired degrees to rotate by as an argument for rotateSelectedElement()
rotateSelectedElement(45)
edit: Made code clearer. Code now executes in Revit Python Shell without any further modifications. Refer to directions above if you have trouble!