![]() Spend time in Revit alongside the tutorials just so you can learn how to navigate around it. ![]() Lastly the big walls that people hit is often just learning the interface, knowing what to do but not remembering the buttons and menus to get there. Classes will definitely get you a strong base but the deep Revit knowledge will come from troubleshooting why something isn't working and with Revit that will happen ALOT so have Google ready. Just jump in and play around, you will find a forum or tutorial for just about anything you want to do. In the end they've learned workarounds to do Autocad processes in Revit but weren't able to understand how Revit approaches designs as a whole. "How do I do this from Autocad in Revit?", "Oh this will be like (blank) from Autocad". Coming from Fusion 360, Id call it a bit quirky, but not intimidating. So the learning curve does not appear to be too deep. In my classes it's the ones who are constantly trying to find similarities between Revit and their Autocad knowledge that struggle the most. I installed Solid Edge Community Edition yesterday and after about 4 hours I can design simple parts and Im printing a small bottle stand right now. My big advice is to approach Revit as if you've never heard of AutoCAD.
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