Revit Formulas
Revit Formulas
I´ve been building a lot of parametric content in Revit, and always enjoy the power of using formulas
to drive and control things. So here´s a few examples that I´ve collected over time, and also some
VERY recent additions (New rounding functions in Revit 2012).
The basic operators (add, subtract, multiply, ect.) have been left out on purpose, but feel free to add
more useful formulas, that you use in your families
Exponentiation
X raised to the power of Y = X ^ Y
E raised to an x power
E is a mathematical constant that is approximately equal to 2.7. It is an irrational number, but if we
truncate it to 20 decimals it would be 2.7182818284590452353.
Revit usage = exp(x)
Circles with pi π
Usage in Revit = pi()
Square Root
Fixed value = sqrt(999)
Parameter = sqrt(Width)
Formula= sqrt(Width + Height)
Logarithm
The logarithm of a number to a given base is the exponent to which the base must be raised in order
to produce that number. For example, the logarithm of 1000 to base 10 is 3, because three factors of
10 must be multiplied to yield a thousand: 10 × 10 × 10 equals 1000
Revit usage = log(1000)
Conditional statements
Conditional statement uses this structure:
Conditional statements can contain numeric values, numeric parameter names, and Yes/No
parameters.
Currently, <= and >= are not implemented. To express such a comparison, you can use a logical
NOT. For example, a<=b can be entered as NOT(a>b)
Simple IF Statement
IF (Length < 900, <true>, <false>)
Using logical OR
IF ( OR ( x = 1 , y = 2 ) , <true>, <false>)
Returns <true> if either x=1 or y=2, else <false>
Nested IF statements
IF ( Length < 500 , 100 , IF ( Length < 750 , 200 , IF ( Length < 1000 , 300 , 400 ) ) )
Returns 100 if Length<500, 200 if Length<750, 300 if Length<1000 and 400 if Length>1000
Length A
Length B
Length C
Return Length (Returns the greatest of the three length parameters)
Return Length = if(and(or(Length A > Length B, Length A = Length B), or(Length A > Length C,
Length A = Length C)), Length A, if(and(or(Length B > Length A, Length B = Length A), or(Length B
> Length C, Length B = Length C)), Length B, if(and(or(Length C > Length A, Length C = Length A),
or(Length C > Length B, Length C = Length B)), Length C, 0 mm)))
Another option is to use an extra "Calc" parameter, which is a bit more clumsy but also way easier
and more manageable for us mortals.
Return Length = if(A > D, if(A > C, if(A > B, A, B), if(B > C, B, C)), if(B > D, if(B > C, B, C), if(C > D,
C, D)))
Known: a+b
c = sqrt(a ^ 2 + b ^ 2)
A = atan(a / b)
B = atan(b / a)
Known: a+c
b = sqrt(c ^ 2 - a ^ 2)
A = asin(a / c)
B = acos(a / c)
Known: b+c
a = sqrt(c ^ 2 - b ^ 2)
A = acos(b / c)
B = asin(b / c)
Known: c + A
a = c * sin(A)
b = c * cos(A)
B = 90° - A
Known: c + B
a = c * cos(B)
b = c * sin(B)
A = 90° - B
Known: a + B
b = a * tan(B)
c = a / cos(B)
A = 90° - B
Known: b + A
a = b * tan(A)
c = b / cos(A)
B = 90° - A
Known: a + A
b = a / tan(A)
c = a / sin(A)
B = 90° - A
Known: b + B
a = b / tan(B)
c = b / sin(B)
A = 90° - B
Range of Values
Given the following parameters:
user_value:
min_value:
max_value:
actual_value: = if (user_value < min_value, min_value, if (user_value > max_value, max_value,
user_value))
Specify a range of valid entries, with the min_value and max_value parameters; then, use the actual
value if it is within the range; otherwise, use your minimum or maximum values.
Circular Segments.
Here's how to calculate the Segment length, the Chord Length, the Angle etc. (Image should speak
for itself)
number to round: X
number to round to: Y
(ROUND(X/Y))*Y
rounding a parameter value to the nearest five would look like this:
(ROUND(<parameter>/5))*5