cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 
cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

Community Tip - You can subscribe to a forum, label or individual post and receive email notifications when someone posts a new topic or reply. Learn more! X

Set transparency of one part impacts another (non-selected) part?

GO_10898978
10-Marble

Set transparency of one part impacts another (non-selected) part?

I just noticed a strange behavior in CREO 10. In my model tree I selected a single part representing a volume (extruded feature). Within this part/volume I'm packaging other components. I want to see through this volume to see the other parts. So, I select this Volume (2nd art in model tree) click Edit Modal Appearances... and change the transparency setting to see-trough. What happens is another part (3rd item in modal tree) transparency also changes. I noticed this and wanted to turn off transparency. When I edit this part (3rd) whatever changes I make impacts the other part (2nd). Why are these two related for Appearances? How do I break this relationship? Mind you I am only selecting one part to apply transparency. 

7 REPLIES 7

It is hard to say what is going on without more info.  Can you provide models or screen shots?


There is always more to learn in Creo.

Hi,

please upload testing data.


Martin Hanák

I cannot upload screenshots - I work on proprietary Military Systems.  I hoped to have explained as best I could above. 

 

So maybe it's my lack of understanding how Edit Model Appearances works. I would think if I selected one part within an assembly (let's say part 2 in a multipart assembly) only the appearance of that selected part would change, Yet Part 2 and Part 3 both change and are linked. Part 3 resides within part 2 volume, but so do 3-4 other parts. Only Part 3 changes with Part 2. If I select Part 5 (different part in modal tree) and select Edit it doesn't change - only Parts 2 & 3 change, How am I not using Edit Appearance correctly???? In some ways CREO tools never work as I would expect them to so there is that.

 

I somehow got it to work but I forgot what I did - again CREO tools don't work like I expect them to intuitively to work.

 

I will try to investigate this further. Thanks for the help.

 

Can you add screen shots of the toolboxes you are using to set transparency or better describe how you are trying to set transparency.

 

From your description I assume you are using Appearances and selecting a Model appearance to edit the transparency. This will affect any entity that uses that appearance.  Your need to first apply a unique appearance, then modify.

kdirth_0-1732306662681.png

I would also suggest trying Component Display Style>Transparent

kdirth_1-1732306934216.png

 

 


There is always more to learn in Creo.

Your first screen shot is actually what I seen during pulldown.

 

So I learned CREO on my own (coming from NX and SW). The second screenshot is exactly what I was looking for - thanks! I need to poke around CREO menus more.

 

So the first screen shot - I would think selecting part and then editing appearances would only impact that part. This is not the case. 

 

You helped me kdirth - thanks. I will play around a bit more to get a better understand of how to apply appearances. I wish I could select part - right mouse click and edit appearance properties - and only have that impact just that part. The second method is just buried in a drop down. Is there a way to the right click menu? I'm sure there is a way.

 

Thanks again

Appearances are not edited on a per-model basis, if you're in an assembly, but on a per-appearance basis. Basically, you can have several different appearances, and apply them to different models. For examples, model 1, 2, and 4 might have appearance A, and model 3 and 5 have appearance B. Editing appearance B will affect both model 3 and 5. To edit the appearance of a single model, you need to apply a new appearance to it that is only used by that model. Then any changes you make to it affects only that model.

 

Also note that adding an appearance on a model in assembly mode will set that instruction only in that assembly. If you open the part in its own widow, or open a different assembly containing the part, the appearance will be unchanged. To edit the "inherent" appearance of the part, you need to do it in part mode, either by opening the part into a separate window, or by activating the part.

 

There are more subtleties to how this works. It's quite logical once you're used to it, but if it works differently from your previous CAD system, it's bound to be confusing.

 

By the way, you can change what is displayed in your popup and right-click menus in Creo. Right-click the popup menu and pick "customize", or choose "customize" from the right-click menu you want to change. Then you can add any command you want to it. Furthermore, you can record your own macros (called "mapkeys") and add them as buttons to your menus. So you could for example record a macro that creates a new appearance and adds it to the selected model, and you could place that macro on your right-click menu. Then you would have the behavior you're seeking. This is of course a bit advanced, for someone who just started working with Creo. 😄

Hi,

I am sending video and test data showing how to apply colors on part level.


Martin Hanák
Announcements
NEW Creo+ Topics: Real-time Collaboration


Top Tags