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I am sure this is a simple one but I am spinning my wheels on how to do this. I would like to add a general note section(see example below) to the drawing formats so when the user creates a drawing they are able to edit these notes or add to them in the drawing. I tried adding an annotation feature to the start part and then placed the callout in the format (¬e) and when that format is used to create a drawing the note doesn't populate. I am trying to make this simple for the users so they don't have to create a NOTE, from file in drawing mode each time a drawing is created.
NOTES
1. BREAK ALL SHARP EDGES
2.
3.
Thanks for the help
We have these Items in the title block on the format. The entries come from the parameters within the model. These are part of a longer list of parameter items that are in our start parts. When the user creates a model, assembly/part, the entries are editable within the parameter file. When they start the drawing all the fields on the format are populated accordingly.
Parameters:
BREAK_SHARP_EDGES_FROM
BREAK_SHARP_EDGES_TO
In the Format
&BREAK_SHARP_EDGES_FROM
&BREAK_SHARP_EDGES_TO
Hope this helps.
Ilene Harris
Sr. Designer / Cad Administrator
Pacific Scientific HTL
1800 Highland Ave.
Duarte CA 91010
Tel: +1 (626) 434 1161
Fax: +1 (626) 359 7013
ilene.harris@meggitt.com
www.meggitt.com
In Reply to Joe francz:
I am sure this is a simple one but I am spinning my wheels on how to do this. I would like to add a general note section(see example below) to the drawing formats so when the user creates a drawing they are able to edit these notes or add to them in the drawing. I tried adding an annotation feature to the start part and then placed the callout in the format (¬e) and when that format is used to create a drawing the note doesn't populate. I am trying to make this simple for the users so they don't have to create a NOTE, from file in drawing mode each time a drawing is created.
NOTES
1. BREAK ALL SHARP EDGES
2.
3.
Thanks for the help
Hi Joe...
You definitely want to add your notes to a drawing template. Templates give you the ability to add notes, symbols, and other annotations to each drawing as it's created. Davig Haigh's presentation probably covers this in depth. A drawing template is different than a format. Think of the format as just the drawing frame with relevant intelligent text you'd expect to see in a format (title block, rev block, border, perhaps a BOM, etc). A drawing template is much different.
Let's say you needed to make a series of injection molded plastic parts. All of these parts have similar notes. Let's say you also need to make a series of sheet metal parts with another set of notes custom to those sheet metal parts. Going further, assume you also have a series of machined parts with yet another set of custom notes and even some special symbols for part marking. In this situation, templates are your best friend.
You can have one template for the injection molded parts, one for sheetmetal, and a third for machine components. All three templates can use the exact same ANSI-D sized format (with title block, etc). Yet each template can contain different notes, symbols, and other annotations specific to the parts they'll be used to detail. Your sheetmetal template may have notes regarding bend allowance while your plastic template may contain a note indicating the acceptable shrinkage range.
You can actually turn any drawing into a template. Let's say you've made a drawing of a cut piece of pipe. You can use that drawing as a template to create OTHER drawings of cut pipe re-using the notes, symbols, views, tables and related annotations and simply replacing the model.
Give David's presentation a look. If you have any questions afterward... please ask!
Thanks!
-Brian