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Control F

GrahameWard
5-Regular Member

Control F

Is it just me, or is the "Ctrl F" functionality mostly useless? I find it completely counter-intuitive. I can only use it to find one or two types of things. When I try to find other things I am stumped. What for example is the difference conceptually between "Look for:" and "Look by:" ? I have mostly avoided it ever since Wildfire came out. I've worked out how to find a feature by i.d. number, how to find a dimension in a feature (feature, Attribute-dimension-name "is equal to" [dxxx]. But how do I find a feature by its name? I used to be able to do this easily in 2001.


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1 REPLY 1

I wouldn't say useless, but definitely counter-intuitive.

"Look for" determines the results you get and "Look by" determines what the rules apply to. Let's say you want to find a feature that contains your dimension name "equal to" [dxxx]. Then you set look for to feature and look by to dimension. Now it will find all features that contain a dimension named [dxxx]. Powerful tool but I don't use this particular search option very often.

I find myself using the search tool when I'm in a very large assembly, trying to place a component to datums. Datums are hidden by default to keep the clutter down, so I search for a datum plane (or axis, etc.) and change the "Look in" to the component, skeleton, asm, etc. that I want; set the name to *, and flip through the few planes that show up in the results to quickly find the datum of choice. This way I don't have to mess around with turning layers on/off and trying to find a datum through the dense sea of choices and right click selecting forever in the giant master assembly.

Finding a feature by name can be useless unless you've specifically named it. This may also be a bug. It seems the default names that get applied to features aren't the real names. Open a part and do a search "is equal to" for features named * and you'll see only features that don't have a default name applied.

However if you do a search for "is not equal to" for features named * and all of the default named features show up. a feature default-named "Extrude 2" in the tree actually shows up as "EXTRUDE_2" in the search results but is not searchable by this alternate name. It's like not only do they not have a name, the field "name" doesn't even exist for the feature. Weird indeed.

Creo 2 M070

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