help please-micro neuro surgery is easier than editing SW drawing template!!

Discussion in 'SolidWorks' started by Steve, Oct 3, 2004.

  1. Steve

    Steve Guest

    Teddy throwing time is very fast approaching...

    What seems, on the face of it, a simple task, in reality turns out to be
    impossible. For me.

    I'm trying to make my own A4 drawing template, with things like a fixed
    company name, edited in tolerances etc, with dimension fonts and sizes set
    how I want them etc etc.
    The dimension fonts etc is the one thing I can do with success it seems.

    I'm finding that if I choose to edit sheet format, I can edit the tolerances
    as I require.

    But what I am left with seems to be a drawing that is trapped in 'edit sheet
    format' mode, and annotations that I put in before selecting 'edit sheet
    format' are now gone into the digital ether. I can't find a way out of this.

    If I then save it as a template, then use it in a drawing, when I put in a
    part view I just get the box that would normally contain the model view.

    I've asked a few Q's on this, and the replies say 'just do this, just do
    that, no problemmo'. Umm, yes problemmo for me...

    Could a kind soul give me an IQzero's instruction (or link to) on how to do
    this please, like:

    1 Plug in PC and turn it on.
    2 Sit within reach of PC.
    3 Run SW 2004
    4 Open a drawing template

    Its after 4 it turns to sh1t.....

    thanks !!
     
    Steve, Oct 3, 2004
    #1
  2. Steve

    matt Guest

    to get out of "edit sheet format", right click in white space on the
    drawing and go to "edit sheet"

    annotations and views on the sheet disappear when editing the format, so
    you're not seeing things, that's how it's supposed to work, except that
    you should save the template when in "edit sheet" instead of "edit sheet
    format"

    matt
     
    matt, Oct 3, 2004
    #2
  3. Steve

    Krister L Guest

    Steve

    In the file menu there is a line saying "Save Sheet Format".....after You
    have edited the sheet format...get out of there by "Edit Sheet" instead.
    While editing sheet You can add Your company name, other annotations, create
    ancors for tables and stuff like that. While editing sheet You can set up
    Your dimension style, tolerance style and other things which You find under
    Tools/Options/Document Properties.
    Now ......when You save this template....first go to File menu and hit "Save
    Sheet Format" and You'll get a dialouge box asking You to save a
    ..slddrt-file. Save It in the same folder as Your other templates and name
    it. Then ....save the document as a template by "Save As" in the File menu,
    and in the "Save As" dialouge box pick "DRWDOT" as file extension and save
    the template in the same folder as the slddrt-file.

    Krister L
     
    Krister L, Oct 4, 2004
    #3
  4. Steve

    P Guest

    Back to basics

    1. Three file extensions have to do with this subject:

    a. .slddrw -- the actual drawing file
    b. .drwdot -- the drawing template
    c. .slddrt -- the sheet format

    2. Every template has a sheet format embedded in it.

    3. The sheet format for any drawing can be saved apart from the
    drawing

    4. A multisheet drawing can have one or more sheet formats in it.

    5. When editing a sheet format, the drawing views including the sheet
    view are invisible.

    6. A sheet format can contain lines, arcs, notes, dimensions, images,
    etc. (Dimensions are typically not used on the sheet format except to
    position things and should be hidden.)

    7. A template can contain document settings, preferred units, layers,
    views, tolerance settings, etc.

    First make a sheet format for your A4 size. Put all the title block,
    notes with linked values, logos, etc. on the sheet format and save it.

    Then, make your template using your sheet format and provide dimension
    preferences, tolerance preferences, etc. to the template and save the
    template in your templates directory.

    Link to your templates directory using
    TOOLS/OPTIONS/SYSTEM/FILE/TEMPLATES.

    Hope this helps.
     
    P, Oct 4, 2004
    #4
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