Dear Official; As we have tried to explain together with the projects in the appendix, I have tried to express the mistakes made by our civil engineer friends around us. (My Turkish Might Be Inadequate. I'M SORRY. I TRIED TO EXPLAIN THE SITUATION BELOW, REGARDING MY CALL WITH ONE OF YOU RELATED TO THE SUBJECT FARUK.) Recently, due to architectural concerns, TBDY 2018 has limited the solutions with a certain height (including the height of the solutions with hollow blocks). has gravitated towards beamless flooring solutions. In this regard, as you can see in the annexes, the friends chose the way to go for a solution by defining the floor with beams in places where there are no architectural concerns, or by defining non-beamed flooring in the axes coming in the middle of the room (!!!!) in order to reduce the floor thickness. These friends, who defined all floors as semi-rigid diaphragms in the IDE TBDY 2018 Analysis settings wizard, arranged the principles of ensuring continuity by connecting the columns/walls to each other with beams and/or transferring the horizontal force transmission with slabs in non-beamed slabs and beams in beamed slabs (????? ???). The solution algorithm of the IDE that I want to ask you is about how it perceives and solves these designs. Accordingly: a. As can be seen in the annexes, how does it behave in solutions for beamless flooring and semi-rigid diaphragm in structures that do not even have a certain axis system? b. If we talk about the approach of friends, do earthquake forces transfer with beams where the beams are and with the slabs where they are not? c. In the trainings we received, it was carefully emphasized that the solution system should be monolithic in order for the building to behave stably under the effects of earthquakes while designing. How true is a mixed system on the same floor, even when the approaches such as beams on the 1st floor, hollow blocks on the 2nd floor, and cassette solutions on the 3rd floor are never approved and dictated to us by our expert teachers. D. According to TBDY 2018, the principle that vertical loads must be met with columns and shear walls and all earthquake forces must be met by shear walls in solutions made with beamless flooring seems to have been bypassed in the attached project. Here is how the IDE algorithm takes an approach. (NOTE: In order to better explain the AUTOCAD example from friends in the attachment, I have drawn it as IDE, designed it with their perspective, made a solution and delivered it to you.)