| Task | How to Apply ASCE 7‑99 | |------|------------------------| | | Follow the sequence: dead load → live load → snow load → wind load → earthquake load. Use the appropriate Table and Equation numbers (e.g., Table 3‑1 for dead loads, Equation 7‑2 for wind pressure). | | Code Compliance Reports | Cite the exact clause: “per ASCE 7‑99, Section 5.3.1, the minimum design live load for office spaces is 50 psf.” | | Retrofit of Existing Buildings | Compare the loads used in original design (often documented in the as‑built drawings) with the loads in ASCE 7‑99 to assess adequacy. | | Academic Research | When reviewing historical design practices, reference ASCE 7‑99 as the governing load code for the period 1999‑2005. | | Software Modeling | Many structural analysis tools (ETABS, SAP2000, STAAD.Pro) have built‑in libraries for ASCE 7‑99 loads—activate the “ASCE 7‑99” option to automatically apply the correct load combinations. |
By utilizing legitimate channels to access ASCE 11-99, engineers ensure they are working with accurate information, protecting their digital security, and supporting the continued development of the codes that keep our built environment safe.
5 thoughts on “Export the results of best practice analyzer from all models”
Asce 11-99 Free Pdf ((hot)) Access
| Task | How to Apply ASCE 7‑99 | |------|------------------------| | | Follow the sequence: dead load → live load → snow load → wind load → earthquake load. Use the appropriate Table and Equation numbers (e.g., Table 3‑1 for dead loads, Equation 7‑2 for wind pressure). | | Code Compliance Reports | Cite the exact clause: “per ASCE 7‑99, Section 5.3.1, the minimum design live load for office spaces is 50 psf.” | | Retrofit of Existing Buildings | Compare the loads used in original design (often documented in the as‑built drawings) with the loads in ASCE 7‑99 to assess adequacy. | | Academic Research | When reviewing historical design practices, reference ASCE 7‑99 as the governing load code for the period 1999‑2005. | | Software Modeling | Many structural analysis tools (ETABS, SAP2000, STAAD.Pro) have built‑in libraries for ASCE 7‑99 loads—activate the “ASCE 7‑99” option to automatically apply the correct load combinations. |
By utilizing legitimate channels to access ASCE 11-99, engineers ensure they are working with accurate information, protecting their digital security, and supporting the continued development of the codes that keep our built environment safe. asce 11-99 free pdf
hi Ake,
Thanks for the comment! Yes that’s something I added myself in the extracted JSON rule file, you can either add it too or remove the M code part but if you’re not sure where to remove it I’d advise to add the [severity] in the file like I explained in the post: Here is an example of my rule description: “[Performance] [2] Do not use floating point data types” where [2] is the severity.
hi
i have an issue.
i’ve installed TE 2 and have a model.bim file on my machine and already downloaded bpa.json. but when I run the script in powershell I face this error:
TabularEditor.exe : The term ‘TabularEditor.exe’ is not recognized as the name of a cmdlet, function, script file, or
operable program. Check the spelling of the name, or if a path was included, verify that the path is correct and try
again.
At line:2 char:1
+ TabularEditor.exe “d:\Model.bim” -A > bparesults.txt
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+ CategoryInfo : ObjectNotFound: (TabularEditor.exe:String) [], CommandNotFoundException
+ FullyQualifiedErrorId : CommandNotFoundException
hi Mahdi,
Can you copy/paste your script here