Inventor Styles & Standards for your files
In the October 2007
edition of the newsletter, Debbie Dixon discussed changing
your material styles in a single part file. In this issue,
Ill be covering how to apply those changes to pre-existing
files. Well also detail what the Style Management Wizard
and the Style Library Manager (both external from Inventor)
are and what they do for you. Debbies article can be found
at:
http://newsletters.hagerman.com/newsletters/ebul60-Mech.htm.
This article uses the IDWs
or Inventor DWGs it doesnt matter which, as examples,
however, these processes are the same for the .ipts as well.
Keep in mind that the best practice is to make all your
changes to your template file ahead of time. Granted, that
is not always practiced, so sometimes you end up with files
that are older than the template and therefore, have
different style settings. To get the older files to match
the template file, the approach that Debbie Dixon outlined
for materials in a part file is the exact same procedure
that you use for your IDWs and Inventor DWGs. The only
difference is the file type; everything else is identical.
For example, in the Projects dialogue window, Use Style
Library= should still be set to Yes. Once you
make the modifications to your template file, clicking
Format/Save Styles to Style Library should be your next
course of action. And finally, you can change the Projects
Use Style Library= back to Read Only. See, shes
already perfectly covered your workflow on that, but you
probably didnt realize that you were getting workflows on
two different file types for the price of one.
Now that your Style
Library has all your standards set up, how do you get those
settings to other drawing files that were created before you
set up your standards? Wait a minute, you mean you actually
created drawings before you set up your
drawing standards?! Yeah, right, like none of us have had to
do that before. Seriously, if youve had to do that, then
its actually a good thing. For one, youre not alone in
that practice; weve all had to get the job done before we
were able to set up our standards. Also, that means that
this article should be very useful in helping you inch
closer to that awe-inspiring mystical state of drawing
existence know as being standards compliant. Believe it or
not, it does exist. Its like the Loch Ness Monster: Only a
select few have ever seen it.
OK,
so where do we go from here? Well, first off, open a drawing
that does not contain your Style setups for your dimensions
and such. Keep in mind that some of your colors, linetypes,
text heights and such are most likely going to change once
you perform the next step, so there might be a little
placement clean-up needed to readjust things. Second step
is, from the Format menu, click on Update Styles (See
Figure 1).This tells the drawing to compare its own
styles settings to that of the Style Library. In the
dialogue box that follows, choose the items that you wish to
update. Typically all changes will be applied.
Now, all (or at least
some) of your pre-existing files have your Style Library
changes applied to them so that those files now conform to
your company standards. So, what if you have a bunch of
files to clean up or modify at once or even some style
behaviors in one style library that you need in a different
style library? Well, that is where the next two tools can
come into play. Allow me to introduce the Style Management
Wizard and the Style Library Manager tools for Inventor,
both of which are typically found under the Start button,
All Programs/Autodesk/Autodesk Inventor 2008/Tools.
First,
lets see what the Style Management Wizard does for you. The
Style Management Wizard allows you to Harvest Styles or
Purge Styles from a particular standard (Figure 2).
Usually, most CAD users have just one standard, but there
are some users that require multiple styles to be set up
based on their own customers standards. Well look at
Harvest styles first.
Starting
out, you need to specify a project file to work on. After
selecting a project file, you then select a file or multiple
files that contain styles within them which you need to make
available to other files. You are also given the capability
of adding all the files associated with this particular
project file (Figure 3). The next screen allows you
to specify if you want these harvested styles to be placed
in a new style library that you designate, or place them
into a pre-existing style library. Once you hit Start, the
process begins and gives a status screen after the operation
is complete.
Now, what about purging?
What does the Purge option do exactly? The Purge option
looks at the same file or files that you selected and
removes all unused styles from your files. This is most
beneficial on large assemblies as removing the unused styles
can reduce the memory footprint of that large assembly.
The Style Library Manager
allows you to compare two different style libraries to see
the differences. Any items shown in blue are unique behavior
setups, any items
listed
in red are items that are different for the two style
libraries. The Style Library Manager is divided into three
sections (Figure 4). The pane at left lists the
Inventor objects. The center pane lists one of the style
libraries and its setups based on the Inventor object
selected in the left pane. The pane at right lists the other
style library directory that youre comparing to. Selecting
any Inventor object lists the behaviors and allows you to
add that behavior to the other style library via the >>
button in the middle of the dialogue box. The three buttons
vertically placed in the center of the dialogue box allow
you to filter the displayed styles from All Styles to
Mismatched Styles to Unique Styles. Once youre done moving
object behaviors around, you simply exit the Style Library
Manger and get on with your day.