title block in wildfire

Discussion in 'Pro/Engineer & Creo Elements/Pro' started by cosy, Nov 4, 2004.

  1. cosy

    cosy Guest

    Hi,
    I'm new in proe and I want to create a title block that i want to use for
    all my drawings - with company logo, name, date, drawing no, title, etc.
    Please help me.
    Thanks,
    Diana
     
    cosy, Nov 4, 2004
    #1
  2. cosy

    dakeb Guest

    Can you not import your old one from your previous cad package as a dxf
    file?
     
    dakeb, Nov 4, 2004
    #2
  3. cosy

    Jeff Howard Guest

    I'm new in proe and I want to create a title block ....

    In addition to D.B.'s import suggestion....

    You might try sites like ptcuser.org, mcadcentral.com looking for
    tutorials. Web search for something like
    Pro/E + "title block" OR "drawing format" + tutorial
    will turn up a bunch of stuff that you might be able to sift what you want
    out of. (You can start compiling a 'useful resource' list out of it, too.)

    Not to jab at this group; I'd also recommend hooking up to one or both the
    above mentioned sites. They have more traffic (?), available 'knowledge
    base' archives; good places for mining info.

    (I like the newsreader interface of this group, myself. Think the lack of
    binary attachments hurts it though.)
     
    Jeff Howard, Nov 4, 2004
    #3
  4. cosy

    David Janes Guest

    : Hi,
    : I'm new in proe and I want to create a title block that i want to use for
    : all my drawings - with company logo, name, date, drawing no, title, etc.

    Yeah, I know, this is something that really deserves a tutorial, a whole course!
    There's a lot to it!! I'm sure you've discovered.

    Most of the formats (and it would help if you can find a finish-formed one to
    study) are a mixture of draft geometry and Pro/e tables. In addition, there is
    some pretty slick stuff for adding a call out grid (could roughly second as a
    drafting grid, but mainly provides hash marks around the border).

    All of this is available through 'File>New>Format'. You can use a couple things to
    create formats. As dakeb said, import framework of the draft geometry (or wind up
    using Pro/e's sketch tools to create it). But, by all means, where ever you need
    to capture parametric information, use tables and all the variety of techniques
    for manipulating them like merge cells, change widths/heights. Then, within the
    table, enter parametric information as notes with &parameter or as symbols within
    a repeat region ('Table>Repeat region>Create'), then enter repeat region
    parameters for creating you BOM. This is an entire chapter in a Pro/e detailing
    course.

    David Janes
     
    David Janes, Nov 6, 2004
    #4
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