Glossary
absorbed
A feature, sketch, or annotation that is contained in another item (usually a feature)
in the FeatureManager design tree. Examples are the profile sketch and profile path in a
base-sweep, or a cosmetic thread annotation in a hole.
align
Tools that assist in lining up annotations and dimensions (left, right, top, bottom,
and so on). For aligning parts in an assembly, see
mate.
alternate position view
A drawing view in which one or more views are superimposed in phantom lines on the
original view. Alternate position views are often used to show range of motion of an assembly.
anchor point
(1) The end of a leader that attaches to the note, block, or other annotation. See
attachment point. (2) Sheet
formats contain anchor points for a bill of materials, a hole table, a revision table, and a
weldment cut list.
annotation
A text note or a symbol that adds specific design intent to a part, assembly, or
drawing. Specific types of annotations include note, hole callout, surface finish symbol,
datum feature symbol, datum target, geometric tolerance symbol, weld symbol, balloon, and
stacked balloon. Annotations that apply only to drawings include center mark, annotation
centerline, area hatch, and block.
appearance callouts
Callouts that display the colors and textures of the face, feature, body, and part
under the entity selected and are a shortcut to editing colors and textures.
area hatch
A crosshatch pattern or fill applied to a selected face or to a closed sketch in a
drawing. See
crosshatch.
assembly
A document in which parts, features, and other assemblies (subassemblies) are mated
together. The parts and subassemblies exist in documents separate from the assembly. For
example, in an assembly, a piston can be mated to other parts, such as a connecting rod or
cylinder. This new assembly can then be used as a subassembly in an assembly of an engine.
The extension for a SolidWorks assembly file name is .SLDASM. See
subassembly,
.
attachment point
The end of a leader that attaches to the model (to an edge, vertex, or face, for
example) or to a drawing sheet. See
anchor point.
axis
A straight line that can be used to create model geometry, features, or patterns. An
axis can be made in a number of different ways, including using the intersection of two
planes. See
temporary axis,
reference geometry.
balloon
Labels parts in an assembly, typically including item numbers and quantity. In
drawings, the item numbers are related to rows in a bill of materials (BOM). See stacked
balloon.
base
The first solid feature of a part.
baseline dimensions
Sets of dimensions measured from the same edge or vertex in a drawing. See
ordinate dimensions.
bend
A feature in a sheet metal part. A bend generated from a filleted corner, cylindrical
face, or conical face is a round bend; a bend generated from sketched straight lines is a
sharp bend.
bill of materials
A table inserted into a drawing to keep a record of the parts used in an
assembly.
block
A user-defined annotation that you can use in parts, assemblies, and drawings. A block
can contain text, sketch entities (except points), and area hatch, and it can be saved in a
file for later use as, for example, a custom callout or a company logo.
BOM
See bill of materials.
bottom-up design
An assembly modeling technique where you create parts and then insert them into an
assembly. See
top-down design.
bounding box
An imaginary box created by SolidWorks that completely encloses a model, component, or
drawing view.
broken-out section
A drawing view that exposes inner details of a drawing view by removing material from
a closed profile, usually a spline.
center mark
A cross that marks the center of a circle or arc.
centerline
A centerline marks, in phantom font, an axis of symmetry in a sketch or
drawing.
chamfer
Bevels a selected edge or vertex. You can apply chamfers to both sketches and
features.
child
A dependent feature related to a previously-built feature. For example, a chamfer on
the edge of a hole is a child of the parent hole.
click-click
As you sketch, if you click and then release the pointer, you are in click-click mode.
Move the pointer and click again to define the next point in the sketch sequence.
click-drag
As you sketch, if you click and drag the pointer, you are in click-drag mode. When you
release the pointer, the sketch entity is complete.
closed profile
Also called a closed contour, it is a sketch or sketch entity with no exposed
endpoints; for example, a circle or polygon.
collapse
The opposite of explode. The collapse action returns an exploded assembly's parts to
their normal positions.
Collision Detection
An assembly function that detects collisions between components when components move
or rotate. A collision occurs when an entity on one component coincides with any entity on
another component.
component
Any part or subassembly within an assembly
configuration
A variation of a part or assembly within a single document. Variations can include
different dimensions, features, and properties. For example, a single part such as a bolt can
contain different configurations that vary the diameter and length. See
design
table.
ConfigurationManager
Located on the left side of the SolidWorks window, it is a means to create, select,
and view the configurations of parts and assemblies.
construction geometry
The characteristic of a sketch entity that the entity is used in creating other
geometry but is not itself used in creating features. See
reference
geometry.
continuity
Continuity defines the junction point between two curves or surfaces. A higher continuity implies a less visible junction point. G0, G1, and G2 continuity is independent of the parameterization of the curve or surface. C0, C1, and C2 continuity is dependent on the parameterization of the curve or surface. In general, C continuity is more stringent than G continuity. For example, C2 continuity always implies G2 continuity, and C1 continuity always implies G1 continuity, but not vice versa.
Curves or surfaces that meet are said to have continuity of G0, or contact continuity. Curves or surfaces that are tangent have a continuity of G1, or tangent continuity. Curves or surfaces for which the rate of change of the radius of curvature is the same where they meet have a continuity of G2, also described as curvature continuous. You can use curvature continuous in creating face blend fillets. A loft with side tangency is an example of level G1.
If the junction point of two curves or surfaces is G2 curvature continuous, continuity may not be C2 or even C1 because the curves or surfaces may be parameterized such that at equal change of parameter near the junction, the parameterized point on one curve or surface may move more than the parameterized point on the other curve or surface. However, if the curves or surfaces that meet are parameterized such that the amount of movement for each point is the same, then the junction continuity is both C1 and C2 as well as G1 and G2.
coordinate system
A system of planes used to assign Cartesian coordinates to features, parts, and
assemblies. Part and assembly documents contain default coordinate systems; other coordinate
systems can be defined with reference geometry. Coordinate systems can be used with
measurement tools and for exporting documents to other file formats.
cosmetic thread
An annotation that represents threads.
crosshatch
A pattern (or fill) applied to drawing views such as section views and broken-out
sections.
curvature
Curvature is equal to the inverse of the radius of the curve. The curvature can be
displayed in different colors according to the local radius (usually of a surface).
cut
A feature that removes material from a part by such actions as extrude, revolve, loft,
sweep, thicken, cavity, and so on.
dangling
A dimension, relation, or drawing section view that is unresolved. For example, if a
piece of geometry is dimensioned, and that geometry is later deleted, the dimension becomes
dangling.
Defeature
With the Defeature tool, you can remove details from a part or assembly and save the results to a new file in which the details are replaced by dumb solids (that is, solids without feature definition or history). You can then share the new file without revealing all the design details of the model.
degrees of freedom
Geometry that is not defined by dimensions or relations is free to move. In 2D
sketches, there are three degrees of freedom: movement along the X and Y axes, and rotation
about the Z axis (the axis normal to the sketch plane). In 3D sketches and in assemblies,
there are six degrees of freedom: movement along the X, Y, and Z axes, and rotation about the
X, Y, and Z axes. See
under defined.
derived part
A derived part is a new base, mirror, or component part created directly from an
existing part and linked to the original part such that changes to the original part are
reflected in the derived part.
derived sketch
A copy of a sketch, in either the same part or the same assembly, that is connected to
the original sketch. Changes in the original sketch are reflected in the derived sketch.
Design Clipart
Using SolidWorks Search, Design Clipart searches specific folders, finds and dissects
files, and extracts data that you can reuse in SolidWorks.
Design Library
Located in the Task Pane, the Design Library provides a central location for reusable
elements such as parts, assemblies, and so on.
design table
An Excel spreadsheet that is used to create multiple configurations in a part or
assembly document. See
configuration.
detached drawing
A drawing format that allows opening and working in a drawing without loading the
corresponding models into memory. The models are loaded on an as-needed basis.
detail view
A portion of a larger view, usually at a larger scale than the original view.
dimension line
A linear dimension line references the dimension text to extension lines indicating
the entity being measured. An angular dimension line references the dimension text directly to
the measured object.
DimXpertManager
Located on the left side of the SolidWorks window, it is a means to manage dimensions
and tolerances created using DimXpert for parts.
DimXpert for parts
A set of tools that applies dimensions and tolerances to parts according to the
requirements of the ASME Y.14.41-2003 standard.
DisplayManager
The DisplayManager lists the appearances, decals, lights, scene, and cameras applied
to the current model. From the DisplayManager, you can view applied content, and add, edit, or
delete items. When PhotoView 360 is added in, the DisplayManager also provides access to
PhotoView options.
dock point
A point on an annotation, shown by a dashed red square, where you can attach a
multi-jog leader.
document
A file containing a part, assembly, or drawing.
draft
The degree of taper or angle of a face, usually applied to molds or
castings.
drawing
A 2D representation of a 3D part or assembly. The extension for a SolidWorks drawing
file name is .SLDDRW.
drawing sheet
A page in a drawing document.
driving dimension
Also referred to as a model dimension, it sets the value for a sketch entity. It can
also control distance, thickness, and feature parameters.
Dynamic Clearance
An assembly function that detects the clearance between components when the components
move or rotate. The clearance is the minimum distance between any entity on one component to
any entity on another component.
edge
A single outside boundary of a feature.
edge flange
A sheet metal feature that combines a bend and a tab in a single operation.
envelope
A reference component that you use to select components based on their positions
relative to the envelope volume. Envelopes are ignored in assembly operations such as bill of
materials and mass properties.
equation
Creates a mathematical relation between sketch dimensions, using dimension names as
variables, or between feature parameters, such as the depth of an extruded feature or the
instance count in a pattern.
exploded view
Shows an assembly with its components separated from one another, usually to show how
to assemble the mechanism.
export
Save a SolidWorks document in another format for use in other CAD/CAM, rapid
prototyping, web, or graphics software applications.
extension line
The line extending from the model indicating the point from which a dimension is
measured.
extrude
A feature that linearly projects a sketch to either add material to a part (in a base
or boss) or remove material from a part (in a cut or hole).
face
A selectable area (planar or otherwise) of a model or surface with boundaries that
help define the shape of the model or surface. For example, a rectangular solid has six faces.
See
surface.
feature
An individual shape that, combined with other features, makes up a part or assembly.
Some features, such as bosses and cuts, originate as sketches. Other features, such as shells
and fillets, modify a feature's geometry. However, not all features have associated geometry.
Features are always listed in the FeatureManager design tree. See
surface,
out-of-context feature.
feature lines
In ScanTo3D, feature lines form the boundaries between regions. You can edit feature
lines in the Automatic Surface Creation PropertyManager.
FeatureManager design tree
Located on the left side of the SolidWorks window, it provides an outline view of the
active part, assembly, or drawing.
fill
A solid area hatch or crosshatch. Fill also applies to patches on surfaces.
fillet
An internal rounding of a corner or edge in a sketch, or an edge on a surface or
solid.
fillet corner
A corner where exactly three filleted edges meet at one vertex.
Fit tolerance
The tolerance between a hole and a shaft.
forming tool
Dies that bend, stretch, or otherwise form sheet metal to create such form features as
louvers, lances, flanges, and ribs.
fully defined
A sketch where all lines and curves in the sketch, and their positions, are described
by dimensions or relations, or both, and cannot be moved. Fully defined sketch entities are
shown in black.
geometric tolerance
A set of standard symbols that specify the geometric characteristics and dimensional
requirements of a feature.
global variable
A variable that you define, for use in equations, custom properties, and so
on.
graphics area
The area in the SolidWorks window where the part, assembly, or drawing
appears.
Grid Systems
You can use Grid Systems to guide placement of structural members, locate equipment,
or provide visual reference to the overall design.
guide curve
A 2D or 3D curve used to guide a sweep or loft.
handle
An arrow, square, or circle that you can drag to adjust the size or position of an
entity (a feature, dimension, or sketch entity, for example).
helix
A curve defined by pitch, revolutions, and height. A helix can be used, for example,
as a path for a swept feature cutting threads in a bolt.
hem
A sheet metal feature that folds back at the edge of a part. A hem can be open,
closed, double, or tear-drop.
HLR
(hidden lines removed) A view mode in which all edges of the model that are not
visible from the current view angle are removed from the display.
HLV
(hidden lines visible) A view mode in which all edges of the model that are not
visible from the current view angle are shown gray or dashed.
hole table
A table that lists the size and location (from a specified origin datum) of specified
holes in a drawing view.
import
Open files from other CAD software applications into a SolidWorks document.
in-context feature
A feature with an external reference to the geometry of another component; the
in-context feature changes automatically if the geometry of the referenced model or feature
changes.
inferencing
The system automatically creates (infers) relations between dragged entities (sketched
entities, annotations, and components) and other entities and geometry. This is useful when
positioning entities relative to one another.
instance
An item in a pattern or a component in an assembly that occurs more than once. Blocks
are inserted into drawings as instances of block definitions.
Instant3D
Functionality that lets you quickly create and modify model geometry using drag
handles and rulers.
interference detection
A tool that displays any interference between selected components in an
assembly.
iso-parametric curves
Curves that follow constant UV directions.
jog
(1) A sheet metal feature that adds material to a part by creating two bends from a
sketched line. (2) A sketch tool that adds jogs to sketches.
knit
A tool that combines two or more faces or surfaces into one. The edges of the surfaces
must be adjacent and not overlapping, but they cannot ever be planar. There is no difference
in the appearance of the face or the surface after knitting.
layer
A layer in a drawing can contain dimensions, annotations, geometry, and components.
You can toggle the visibility of individual layers to simplify a drawing or assign properties
to all entities in a given layer.
layout sketch
A sketch that contains important sketch entities, dimensions, and relations. You
reference the entities in the layout sketch when creating new sketches, building new geometry,
or positioning components in an assembly. This allows for easier updating of your model
because changes you make to the layout sketch propagate to the entire model.
leader
A solid line from an annotation (note, dimension, and so on) to the referenced
feature.
library feature
A frequently used feature, or combination of features, that is created once and then
saved for future use.
lightweight
A part in an assembly or a drawing has only a subset of its model data loaded into
memory. The remaining model data is loaded on an as-needed basis. This improves performance of
large and complex assemblies. See
resolved.
line
A straight sketch entity with two endpoints. A line can be created by projecting an
external entity such as an edge, plane, axis, or sketch curve into the sketch.
loft
A base, boss, cut, or surface feature created by transitions between
profiles.
lofted bend
A sheet metal feature that produces a roll form or a transitional shape from two open
profile sketches. Lofted bends often create funnels and chutes.
mass properties
A tool that evaluates the characteristics of a part or an assembly such as volume,
surface area, centroid, and so on.
mate
A geometric relationship, such as coincident, perpendicular, tangent, and so on,
between parts in an assembly. See
SmartMates.
mate reference
Specifies one or more entities of a component to use for automatic mating. When you
drag a component with a mate reference into an assembly, the software tries to find other
combinations of the same mate reference name and mate type.
Mates folder
A collection of mates that are solved together. The order in which the mates appear
within the Mates folder does not matter.
mirror
(1) A mirror feature is a copy of a selected feature, mirrored about a plane or planar
face. (2) A mirror sketch entity is a copy of a selected sketch entity that is mirrored about
a centerline. If the original feature or sketch is modified, the mirrored copy is updated to
reflect the change.
miter flange
A sheet metal feature that joins multiple edge flanges together and miters the corner.
model
3D solid geometry in a part or assembly document. If a part or assembly document
contains multiple configurations, each configuration is a separate model.
model dimension
A dimension specified in a sketch or a feature in a part or assembly document that
defines some entity in a 3D model.
model item
A characteristic or dimension of feature geometry that can be used in detailing
drawings.
model view
A drawing view of a part or assembly.
mold
A set of manufacturing tooling used to shape molten plastic or other material into a
designed part. You design the mold using a sequence of integrated tools that result in cavity
and core blocks that are derived parts of the part to be molded.
Motion Studies
Motion Studies are graphical simulations of motion and visual properties with assembly
models. Analogous to a configuration, they do not actually change the original assembly model
or its properties. They display the model as it changes based on simulation elements you add.
multibody part
A part with separate solid bodies within the same part document. Unlike the components
in an assembly, multibody parts are not dynamic.
native format
DXF and DWG files remain in their original format (are not converted into SolidWorks
format) when viewed in SolidWorks drawing sheets (view only).
non-intersection contour
Also called a profile, it is a sketch in which entities do not cross each other. For
example, a rectangle is a non-intersecting contour, whereas a cross intersects itself.
OLE object
(Object Linking and Embedding) A Windows file format. You can embed OLE objects in
SolidWorks documents.
open profile
Also called an open contour, it is a sketch or sketch entity with endpoints exposed.
For example, a U-shaped profile is open.
ordinate dimensions
A chain of dimensions measured from a zero ordinate in a drawing or sketch.
origin
The model origin appears as three gray arrows and represents the (0,0,0) coordinate of
the model. When a sketch is active, a sketch origin appears in red and represents the (0,0,0)
coordinate of the sketch. Dimensions and relations can be added to the model origin, but not
to a sketch origin.
out-of-context feature
A feature with an external reference to the geometry of another component that is not
open. See
feature.
over defined
A sketch is over defined when dimensions or relations are either in conflict or
redundant.
parameter
A value used to define a sketch or feature (often a dimension).
parent
An existing feature upon which other features depend. For example, in a block with a
hole, the block is the parent to the child hole feature.
part
A single 3D object made up of features. A part can become a component in an assembly,
and it can be represented in 2D in a drawing. Examples of parts are bolt, pin, plate, and so
on. The extension for a SolidWorks part file name is .SLDPRT. See
multibody
part.
path
A sketch, edge, or curve used in creating a sweep or loft.
pattern
A pattern repeats selected sketch entities, features, or components in an array, which
can be linear, circular, or sketch-driven. If the seed entity is changed, the other instances
in the pattern update.
Physical Dynamics
An assembly tool that displays the motion of assembly components in a realistic way.
When you drag a component, the component applies a force to other components it touches.
Components move only within their degrees of freedom.
pierce relation
Makes a sketch point coincident to the location at which an axis, edge, line, or
spline pierces the sketch plane.
planar
Entities that can lie on one plane. For example, a circle is planar, but a helix is
not.
plane
Flat construction geometry. Planes can be used for a 2D sketch, section view of a
model, a neutral plane in a draft feature, and others.
point
A singular location in a sketch, or a projection into a sketch at a single location of
an external entity (origin, vertex, axis, or point in an external sketch). See
vertex.
predefined view
A drawing view in which the view position, orientation, and so on can be specified
before a model is inserted. You can save drawing documents with predefined views as templates.
profile
A sketch entity used to create a feature (such as a loft) or a drawing view (such as a
detail view). A profile can be open (such as a U shape or open spline) or closed (such as a
circle or closed spline).
projected dimension
If you dimension entities in an isometric view, projected dimensions are the flat
dimensions in 2D. See
true dimension.
projected view
A drawing view projected orthogonally from an existing view.
PropertyManager
Located on the left side of the SolidWorks window, it is used for dynamic editing of
sketch entities and most features.
RealView
A hardware (graphics card) support of advanced shading in real time; the rendering
applies to the model and is retained as you move or rotate a part.
rebuild
Tool that updates (or regenerates) the document with any changes made since the last
time the model was rebuilt. Rebuild is typically used after changing a model dimension.
reference dimension
A dimension in a drawing that shows the measurement of an item, but cannot drive the
model and its value cannot be modified. When model dimensions change, reference dimensions
update.
reference geometry
Includes planes, axes, coordinate systems, and 3D curves. Reference geometry is used
to assist in creating features such lofts, sweeps, drafts, chamfers, and patterns. See
construction geometry.
referenced document
Any document that is referenced by another, typically part documents associated with
an assembly or drawing documents associated with part or assembly documents.
relation
A geometric constraint between sketch entities or between a sketch entity and a plane,
axis, edge, or vertex. Relations can be added automatically or manually.
relative view
A relative (or relative to model) drawing view is created relative to planar surfaces
in a part or assembly.
reload
Refreshes shared documents. For example, if you open a part file for read-only access
while another user makes changes to the same part, you can reload the new version, including
the changes.
reorder
Reordering (changing the order of) items is possible in the FeatureManager design
tree. In parts, you can change the order in which features are solved. In assemblies, you can
control the order in which components appear in a bill of materials.
replace
Substitutes one or more open instances of a component in an assembly with a different
component.
resolved
A state of an assembly component (in an assembly or drawing document) in which it is
fully loaded in memory. All the component's model data is available, so its entities can be
selected, referenced, edited, used in mates, and so on. See
lightweight.
revision table
A table that lists the revisions of a drawing.
revolve
A feature that creates a base or boss, a revolved cut, or revolved surface by
revolving one or more sketched profiles around a centerline.
rip
A sheet metal feature that removes material at an edge to allow a bend.
rollback
Suppresses all items below the rollback bar.
Routing Library Manager
The Routing Library Manager can be opened
independently of the SolidWorks application, and groups several functions together.
section
Another term for profile in sweeps.
section line
A line or centerline sketched in a drawing view to create a section view.
section scope
Specifies the components to be left uncut when you create an assembly drawing section
view.
section view
A section view (or section cut) is (1) a part or assembly view cut by a plane, or (2)
a drawing view created by cutting another drawing view with a section line.
seed
A sketch or an entity (a feature, face, or body) that is the basis for a pattern. If
you edit the seed, the other entities in the pattern are updated.
shared values
Also called linked dimensions, these are named variables that you assign to set the
value of two or more dimensions to be equal.
sharp
A hard corner of a profile; any two contiguous sketch entities that do not have a
tangent or equal curvature relation with each other.
sheet format
Includes page size and orientation, standard text, borders, title blocks, and so on.
Sheet formats can be customized and saved for future use. Each sheet of a drawing document can
have a different format.
shell
A feature that hollows out a part, leaving open the selected faces and thin walls on
the remaining faces. A hollow part is created when no faces are selected to be open.
silhouette edge
The curve representing the extent of a cylindrical or curved face when viewed from the
side.
sketch
A collection of lines and other 2D objects on a plane or face that forms the basis for
a feature such as a base or a boss. A 3D sketch is non-planar and can be used to guide a sweep
or loft, for example.
Smart Fasteners
Automatically adds fasteners (bolts and screws) to an assembly using the SolidWorks
Toolbox library of fasteners.
SmartMates
An assembly mating relation that is created automatically. See
mate.
solid sweep
A cut sweep created by moving a tool body along a path to cut out 3D material from a
model. See
sweep.
spiral
A flat or 2D helix, defined by a circle, pitch, and number of revolutions.
spline
A sketched 2D or 3D curve defined by a set of control points.
split line
Projects a sketched curve onto a selected model face, dividing the face into multiple
faces so that each can be selected individually. A split line can be used to create draft
features, to create face blend fillets, and to radiate surfaces to cut molds.
stacked balloon
A set of balloons with only one leader. The balloons can be stacked vertically (up or
down) or horizontally (left or right).
standard 3 views
The three orthographic views (front, right, and top) that are often the basis of a
drawing.
stereolithography
The process of creating rapid prototype parts using a faceted mesh representation in
STL files.
subassembly
An assembly document that is part of a larger assembly. For example, the steering
mechanism of a car is a subassembly of the car.
suppress
Removes an entity from the display and from any calculations in which it is involved.
You can suppress features, assembly components, and so on. Suppressing an entity does not
delete the entity; you can unsuppress the entity to restore it.
surface
A zero-thickness planar or 3D entity with edge boundaries. Surfaces are often used to
create solid features. Reference surfaces can be used to modify solid features. See
face.
sweep
Creates a base, boss, cut, or surface feature by moving a profile (section) along a
path. For cut-sweeps, you can create solid sweeps by moving a tool body along a path.
tangent arc
An arc that is tangent to another entity, such as a line.
tangent edge
The transition edge between rounded or filleted faces in hidden lines visible or
hidden lines removed modes in drawings.
Task Pane
Located on the right-side of the SolidWorks window, the Task Pane contains SolidWorks
Resources, the Design Library, and the File Explorer.
template
A document (part, assembly, or drawing) that forms the basis of a new document. It can
include user-defined parameters, annotations, predefined views, geometry, and so on.
temporary axis
An axis created implicitly for every conical or cylindrical face in a model.
thin feature
An extruded or revolved feature with constant wall thickness. Sheet metal parts are
typically created from thin features.
TolAnalyst
A tolerance analysis application that determines the effects that dimensions and
tolerances have on parts and assemblies.
top-down design
An assembly modeling technique where you create parts in the context of an assembly by
referencing the geometry of other components. Changes to the referenced components propagate
to the parts that you create in context. See
bottom-up design.
translator
Software that converts a file from one format to another.
triad
Three axes with arrows defining the X, Y, and Z directions. A reference triad appears
in part and assembly documents to assist in orienting the viewing of models. Triads also
assist when moving or rotating components in assemblies.
true dimension
If you dimension entities in an isometric view, true dimensions give you accurate
model values. See
projected dimension.
unabsorbed
A sketch or annotation that is not contained in a feature in the FeatureManager design
tree. An example of an unabsorbed sketch is a layout sketch in an assembly. See
absorbed.
under defined
A sketch is under defined when there are not enough dimensions and relations to
prevent entities from moving or changing size. See
degrees of
freedom.
UV
Horizontal and vertical lines of the underlying parameterization of a curve.
vertex
A point at which two or more lines or edges intersect. Vertices can be selected for
sketching, dimensioning, and many other operations.
viewports
Windows that display views of models. You can specify one, two, or four viewports.
Viewports with orthogonal views can be linked, which links orientation and rotation.
virtual sharp
A sketch point at the intersection of two entities after the intersection itself has
been removed by a feature such as a fillet or chamfer. Dimensions and relations to the virtual
sharp are retained even though the actual intersection no longer exists.
weldment
A multibody part with structural members.
weldment cut list
A table that tabulates the bodies in a weldment along with descriptions and
lengths.
wireframe
A view mode in which all edges of the part or assembly are displayed. See
HLR,
HLV,
shaded.
X display
The size of the X in a chamfer dimension with two numbers, such as 1 X 45° (Length X
Angle), 45° X 1 (Angle X Length) or 1 X 1 (Length X Length).
zebra stripes
Simulate the reflection of long strips of light on a very shiny surface. They allow
you to see small changes in a surface that may be hard to see with a standard display.