Most of the time, unviewable dimensions I've come across are either already shown or shown then erased, are in a note, or are inappropriate based on the view orientation.
Create a new drawing and a new view; it doesn't need a format and try to show the dimension there. I think there's an option to show dimensions in a trimetric; it must be a drawing option, not a config option as I don't see it in the config options list. This should eliminate already-shown and mis-orientation as problems, plus there's no notes so no interference from them.
If it shows there then you can add the new drawing sheet to the existing drawing and see if the dimension remains. If the dimension doesn't survive the transplant then look to see if it is already shown or is in a note. Maybe the view it's shown in is erased.
If it survives the transplant then you should get a more descriptive message when you try to move it to the view you want it in about orientation problems.
Nothing more frustrating then quiet failure; wouldn't a message like 5 dimensions in feature XYZ were available to Show, 2 already shown in View ABC, 1 not shown due to view orientation mismatch to dimension orientation, 2 dimensions shown in selected view. be helpful?
I think you have to have SolidWorks installed to have the optoin to open SolidWorks files directlly.
I've done this here through several versions of Pro. Latest has been Creo 2.0 (various builds).
You need to have either a full version of SolidWorks installed on your machine, or the free SolidWorks Explorer http://www.solidworks.com/sw/support/downloads.htm
The downside is the free SWE is only 32-bit. Therefore, as mentioned elsewhere here, you have to configure your ProE startup to run the 32-bit version of Pro when you are going to import the SW parts.
Once imported, you can open the model in a 64-bit install. You'll see the previouslyimported geometry, but it won't be linked to the SW files.
I had to mess with this a couple of months ago. The guys in our CNC programming office could directly open Solidworks files in 64 bit Creo 2, but nobody in the engineering office could. I installed the previously described tools from Dassault on a designers PC and it did nothing. As just mentioned, it's because only the 32 bit version is available asa free download and the connectivity won't work if you're running 64 bit Creo. What I ended up finding was the CNC guys are running 64 bit Mastercam, which can directly open Solidworks files. The Mastercam install includes a DLL file that provides this capability. If I copied the SwDocumentMgr.dll file from the Mastercam install, placed it on a PC running 64 bit Creo and registered the DLL file using the regsvr command- presto, the install of 64 bit Creo can directly open Solidworks files.
Erik