Windows 11 (10.0.26200 SR0.0) or greater (Physical RAM: 32GB)
.NET Framework 4.8.9221.0
Computer platform: DESKTOP
Standard graphics configuration using DirectX
Primary display: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2070 (NVidia) Memory: 8GB, Driver date: 1-26-2025 (M-D-Y). DirectX(11)
> Accelerated graphics device with 4 adapter port(s)
- Windows Main Display attached to adapter port 0
Secondary graphics devices.
None found.
DirectX Settings
Safe mode: Off
OpenBLAS: OpenBLAS 0.3.29 DYNAMIC_ARCH NO_AFFINITY Zen MAX_THREADS=64.
Rhino plugins that do not ship with Rhino
C:\Program Files\SimLab\Plugins\SimLab 3D PDF From Rhino 6\plugins\SimLabPDFExporter.rhp “SimLab PDF Exporter”
Hmm, that’s peculiar. I could not reproduce this here. I see that you have some settings that are marked changed, but are default and my guess is that causes it to not trigger it. For example, Ghosted mode transparency is 35 by default, and is marked as changed on your end. What happens if you change that to say, 36 and then click restore defaults?
I copied the current settings-Scheme__Default.xml to a backup file.
Then made a _Reset.
And then altered the Ghosted mode, quit and restart etc.
I could reset to Defaults flawlessly.
Then I restored my backup xml.
In order to assure that I still can’t reset to defaults.
Surprise surprise, now I can reset to defaults!
Windows 11 (10.0.26200 SR0.0) or greater (Physical RAM: 32GB)
.NET Framework 4.8.9221.0
Computer platform: DESKTOP
Standard graphics configuration using DirectX
Primary display: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2070 (NVidia) Memory: 8GB, Driver date: 1-26-2025 (M-D-Y). DirectX(11)
> Accelerated graphics device with 4 adapter port(s)
- Windows Main Display attached to adapter port #0
- Secondary monitor attached to adapter port #1
Secondary graphics devices.
None found.
DirectX Settings
Safe mode: Off
OpenBLAS: OpenBLAS 0.3.29 DYNAMIC_ARCH NO_AFFINITY Zen MAX_THREADS=64.
Rhino plugins that do not ship with Rhino
C:\Program Files\SimLab\Plugins\SimLab 3D PDF From Rhino 6\plugins\SimLabPDFExporter.rhp “SimLab PDF Exporter”