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2-Explorer
August 15, 2012
Solved

Does "Blend From File" still exist in Creo?

  • August 15, 2012
  • 1 reply
  • 4293 views

Hi all,

I'm currently running Creo 2.0 and I'm looking for the Blend From File command. I've used the Command Search tool, and I can only locate Curve From File. Has this command disappeared in Creo?

Thank You

Best answer by TomD.inPDX

Du'h!

Go to the ribbon, right click, customize and add "commands not in the ribbon" and there you will find "Blend from File". Put it in the ribbon and you have the old style dialog.

That learning exchange tutorial really is misleading. What a shame!

Almost like PTC is moving us away from the old ways rather than bringing these commands up to date.

1 reply

17-Peridot
August 16, 2012

If you have access to Learning Exchange, yes, there is a tutorial:

http://learningexchange.ptc.com/tutorial/861/create-a-blend-from-a-text-file

They use "MODEL tab/GET DATA group/IMPORT(under the down arrow)" and select the .ibl file.

2-Explorer
August 16, 2012

Thank you for responding. I'm certainly aware of this approach, but it doesn't actually create any surfaces--only curves. I'm pretty sure that there used to be a command in Pro/E that would read in the .ibl file and create a surface in a single step. It was something like Insert>Advanced>Blend From File. I used Pro/E quite a bit a few years ago and I did this regularly.

For simpler sets of curves, inserting curves from a file and then adding a boundary blend works (like the Learning Exchange example). However, with large .ibl files with hundreds of curves, this extra step of having to manually select every single curve to actually make a surface is very time consuming.

17-Peridot
August 16, 2012

That is troubling then. Since the tutorial was put out by PTC, someone in their ultimate wisdom probably decided that the old functionality just didn't fit the ribbon space (if indeed it is now defunct).

I would put in a service request to answer for this. If you can, provide both the old method example (trail file and master files for CS) and a link to the tutorial for Creo.

"Someone" owes you an answer either way.