In this comprehensive tutorial, we'll explore advanced point group functionality in Civil 3D, focusing specifically on the powerful override system that gives you precise control over point display without compromising your existing description keysets.

In our previous discussion, we demonstrated how to modify description keysets to allow control settings from Ground Shots point groups to display in your drawing. However, this approach has significant limitations in professional workflows. Description keysets are typically established as standardized resources across projects and organizations—modifying them for individual point group requirements can create inconsistencies and maintenance headaches down the line. Instead, Civil 3D provides a more elegant solution through the override system. Let's restore our original settings first: navigate to the Settings tab, expand Description Keysets, locate Survey, right-click, and select Edit Keys.

We'll revert our GS settings to their original configuration by selecting the spot point style and setting the point label style to description only. After confirming these changes with the checkmark, select a point, right-click to choose similar points, then right-click again and apply description keys to update the display.

Notice that our points now display according to the original description keyset parameters, but our Ground Shots point group formatting is no longer visible. This is where overrides become indispensable. Right-click on the Ground Shots point group, select Properties, and navigate to the Overrides tab—this is where the real power lies.

The override system operates on a simple but powerful principle: it applies point group settings directly to drawing elements, superseding description keyset parameters without altering the underlying keyset structure. This approach maintains system integrity while providing the flexibility modern workflows demand. You can override various point properties including raw descriptions, elevations, point styles, and label styles. In our current scenario, while the point style matches between our group and description keyset, the label styles differ significantly.


Enable the point label style override by checking the corresponding box, then select "Point Elevation Description" from the dropdown. Click Apply, then OK to implement the changes. You'll immediately see the label style override taking precedence over the description keyset settings—a clean, non-destructive way to achieve your desired display.

Understanding point group hierarchy is crucial for avoiding common Civil 3D pitfalls. The software processes point groups using a top-down priority system, which can create unexpected results if not properly managed. Let's demonstrate this concept by creating a temporary point group: right-click in the point groups area, select New, and name it "Ground Shots Top."

Configure this new group with a northing-easting point label style, then switch to the Overrides tab. Enable the point label style override, set it to northing-easting, then configure the raw description matching to "GS*" to capture all ground shot points. Apply these settings to see the hierarchy in action.

Here's the critical concept: Civil 3D reads point groups sequentially from top to bottom in the Prospector tree. The topmost group takes priority, applying its settings to matching points, then the system moves down the hierarchy, applying subsequent group settings only to points not already claimed by higher-priority groups. This cascade continues until reaching the "All Points" group, which catches any remaining uncategorized points.


To modify this hierarchy, right-click on Point Groups, select Properties, and use the dialog that displays your complete point group list. Select any group and use the arrow controls to adjust its priority position. For instance, promoting Ground Shots above Ground Shots Top will give the Ground Shots group display priority. This hierarchy management becomes essential in complex projects with multiple overlapping point classifications.

Since our Ground Shots Top group served only as a demonstration, we can safely remove it. Right-click the group and select Delete—Civil 3D will prompt for confirmation before removing the point group. Note that this action only deletes the group classification, not the underlying point data.

In our next session, we'll transition into practical survey workflows, covering survey imports and the robust Survey Database functionality that forms the backbone of Civil 3D's data management capabilities.