Getting Started Visualization
Getting Started Visualization
Teamcenter 11.6
Getting Started
with Product
Visualization
PLM00109 • 11.6
Conteúdo
How do I? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-1
How do I? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-1
Display 3D models . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-2
Examine 3D models . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-3
View 3D models from preset viewing angles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-5
Smooth the edges of 3D models . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-5
Capture an image of a 3D model . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-8
Create line drawings from 3D models . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-12
View part properties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-14
Add text markups to the 3D scene . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-18
Add callouts to parts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-24
Measure angles on 3D models . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-28
Save 3D measurements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-30
Display Product Manufacturing Information (PMI) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-33
Change the color of a part . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-34
Create 3D snapshots . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-35
Create Visual Reports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-37
E-mail your work session . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-45
View 2D images . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-46
Compare 2D images . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-49
Change 3D display modes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-54
Create shortcuts to file locations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-56
Change the background color . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-58
Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10-1
Visualization workflow
You can simplify the lifecycle process of your product design by quickly and easily accessing data,
analyzing it, and collaborating on your findings.
Stand-alone viewer
The stand-alone viewer, which runs outside of Teamcenter and is a separate installation, expands
upon Teamcenter's embedded visualization components with support for optional software modules
such as Concept, Visualization Illustration, Quality Producer, and Variation Analysis. Stand-alone
Lifecycle Visualization is integrated with Teamcenter, so you can send data from Teamcenter
applications into the stand-alone viewer, perform analysis, and then save your work back to the
database.
Stand-alone Lifecycle Visualization is available in the following product configurations:
• Base
The Base product configuration enables you to view and mark up 2D images and perform basic
3D analysis operations such as measurements and cross sections.
• Standard
The Standard product configuration provides many additional features, such as advanced
navigation capabilities, markup tools, and support for precise 3D measurements.
• Professional
The Professional product configuration adds analysis functionality such as 3D comparisons, as
well as the ability to manipulate and transform 3D models, create outline captures, and play
motion files that illustrate assembly sequences. You can optionally use add-on modules such as
Animation, Concept, and Visualization Illustration.
• Mockup
The Mockup product configuration provides all of the functionality from the other product
configurations and also includes advanced features such as 3D clearance analysis, geometry
simplification, part groups, 3D filters, and movie captures. You can optionally use all of the
available add-on modules, including Quality Producer, Variation Analysis, Jack, and Path
Planning.
Lifecycle Viewer
The Lifecycle Viewer is a full-fledged visualization client within Teamcenter. It provides nearly all of
the visualization tools offered by the stand-alone viewer, many of which are not available in the
embedded viewers within Teamcenter applications such as My Teamcenter.
The Lifecycle Viewer is available in the same product configurations as the stand-alone viewer, Base,
Standard, Professional, and Mockup. Features available vary depending upon the licensing level.
The Base configuration is automatically installed with the rich client.
Using the Lifecycle Viewer, you can:
• Work within a comprehensive user interface that provides access to many of the options
previously available only with the stand-alone products, including menus and views (the
equivalent of Project Workspace windows such as the Assembly).
• Author visualization data such as motion files, swept volumes, and .vfz collaboration files.
• If an image, ECAD PCB, ECAD Schematic, or JT dataset is selected, the viewer displays the
image, printed circuit board, schematic, or model.
• 2D Multipage
Navigate among pages in multiple-page 2D images or documents.
• 2D Viewing
Pan, zoom, rotate, and flip 2D images.
• 3D Markup
Create 3D markups.
• 3D Measurement
Perform 3D measurements.
• 3D Navigation
Pan, rotate, and zoom 3D models.
• 3D PMI
View and manipulate PMI in your model.
• 3D Section
Create 3D cross sections.
• 3D Selection
Select parts and pick part features.
• 3D Standard Views
Examine your model from preset viewing angles.
• ECAD Base
Manipulate the view of ECAD document layers, control layer color and visibility, search, and
create reports.
• ECAD Markup
Create ECAD markups.
• ECAD Multipage
Navigate among pages in multiple-page schematic documents.
• ECAD Viewing
Pan, zoom, rotate, and flip image.
• Print
Print documents.
• 3D Appearance
Change the appearance of 3D models.
• 3D Clearance
Check the clearance of parts in 3D models.
• 3D Comparison
Compare the geometry of two sets of parts.
• 3D Coordinate System
Create and align parts to local coordinate systems.
• 3D GDT Markup
Create 3D GD&T markups.
• 3D Manipulators
Transform 3D models.
• 3D Markup
Create 3D markups.
• 3D Measurement
Perform 3D measurements.
• 3D Movie Capture
Capture your actions in the 3D viewing window as movie files.
• 3D Navigation
Pan, rotate, and zoom 3D models.
• 3D PMI
View and manipulate PMI in your model.
• 3D Section
Create 3D cross sections.
• 3D Selection
Select parts and pick part features.
• 3D Standard Views
Examine your model from preset viewing angles.
• 3D Thrustline Editor
Create and manipulate thrustlines.
• 3D Visibility
Hide obscuring parts and clip areas of your model.
The viewer embedded in Multi-Structure Manager is available within the Object View tab of the data
panel. The viewer allows you to view associated 2D images and 3D models when you are viewing
and editing a product or process structure.
Visualization use cases
• View product or process structures.
• 2D Multipage
Navigate among pages in multiple-page 2D images or documents.
• 2D Viewing
Pan, zoom, rotate, and flip 2D images.
• 3D Markup
Create 3D markups.
• 3D Measurement
Perform 3D measurements.
• 3D Navigation
Pan, rotate, and zoom 3D models.
• 3D PMI
View and manipulate PMI in your model.
• 3D Section
Create 3D cross sections.
• 3D Selection
Select parts and pick part features.
• 3D Standard Views
Examine your model from preset viewing angles.
The viewer embedded in Manufacturing Process Planner is available within the Object View tab of
the data panel. The viewer allows you to view associated 2D images and 3D models when you are
viewing and editing a process structure.
Visualization use cases
• View product or process structures.
• 2D Multipage
Navigate among pages in multiple-page 2D images or documents.
• 2D Viewing
Pan, zoom, rotate, and flip 2D images.
• 3D Markup
Create 3D markups.
• 3D Measurement
Perform 3D measurements.
• 3D Navigation
Pan, rotate, and zoom 3D models.
• 3D PMI
View and manipulate PMI in your model.
• 3D Section
Create 3D cross sections.
• 3D Selection
Select parts and pick part features.
• 3D Standard Views
Examine your model from preset viewing angles.
JT Preview view
The JT Preview view enables you to examine .jt parts associated with items, item revisions, and
datasets. When you select a compatible object, the .jt part is displayed in the view.
Visualization use cases
• Preview .jt parts.
• Accessing files from Teamcenter, and viewing them in one of the embedded viewers or sending
them to stand-alone Lifecycle Visualization.
• When you install the application, a Startup Accelerator icon appears in the Windows taskbar
notification area.
Startup Accelerator consumes a small amount of your system memory when it loads visualization
DLLs. If your computer is low on memory, you can stop Startup Accelerator to release the memory.
You lose the benefits of Startup Accelerator, but increase available memory.
To Choose
Stop Startup Accelerator and unload the DLLs
Stop
from memory
Restart the Startup Accelerator application
Start
after stopping
Exit
The icon disappears from the Windows taskbar.
Nota
If your computer has adequate memory, you do not need to stop Startup Accelerator.
Manufacturer Models
NVIDIA Quadro, QuadroFX, Grid
AMD FireGL, FirePro
Intel HD 4600 and newer
For full confidence that all of the advanced features of Teamcenter lifecycle visualization are
displayed, including effects such as high-quality transparency, shadows, mirrors, CAE analysis
results, intersection volumes, and other features requiring advanced graphics capabilities, use a
certified system. Siemens PLM Software and our OEM partners rigorously test specific graphics
adapters and drivers on a select set of workstations. Graphic adapters and drivers that pass are
certified for use with a particular version of Teamcenter lifecycle visualization.
For information about certified systems, see the Hardware and Software Certifications page on GTAC
(http://www.plm.automation.siemens.com/locale/support/gtac/certifications.shtml) and follow the
link to Hardware (Graphics Card) Certifications.
Nota
Starting with Lifecycle Visualization version 10.1, if your graphics card supports OpenGL
3.2 or later, Lifecycle Visualization uses advanced OpenGL features to improve 3D
rendering performance, including making use of memory on the graphics card. If you work
with large models, we recommend graphics cards with 2GB or 4GB of GPU memory, or
more. While exact memory requirements are highly situation specific, a rough guideline
for required graphics card memory is 1 GB of graphics memory for every 2 GB of loaded
geometry data.
We do not recommend consumer lines of graphics adapters. These adapters and drivers are
designed for playing games and emphasize frame rate over correctness. Drivers for consumer
graphics are serviced by driver development and ISV partner teams separate from those for
professional 3D adapters.
However, even these video adapters, if you have the most current graphics driver, usually work at a
reduced effects level with Lifecycle Visualization. It may be necessary to reduce the performance
settings.
Nota
When the OpenGL level of a graphics adapter is not capable of rendering an advanced
visualization effect, the visual effect is silently omitted.
Some graphics adapters, especially those manufactured before 2008, contain issues that
prevent Lifecycle Visualization from displaying certain specific features properly, regardless
of their OpenGL support level claims.
You are encouraged to report graphics display problems found on recommended and certified
hardware to https://www.siemens.com/gtac. We attempt to reproduce the problem. If a reproducible
problem is determined to lie within Lifecycle Visualization software, we fix it directly; if a problem is
found with the graphics driver, we work with the graphics vendor to isolate the issue and assist
them as necessary to produce a driver patch.
We do not attempt to resolve problems that cannot be reproduced on recommended or certified
hardware; we advise you to take such issues directly to the graphics adapter manufacturer.
How do I?
The following is a set of best practices for commonly asked questions gathered into one place for
easy access.
• Display 3D models
• Examine 3D models
• Save 3D measurements
• Create 3D snapshots
• View 2D images
• Compare 2D images
Display 3D models
1. Open a 3D model.
2. In the assembly tree, click the + icon next to the name of the top-level assembly node.
Dica
When you first open a 3D model that consists of more than one part, only the assembly
tree is visible. You can use the tree to turn on the entire model or only the parts that
you want to view.
Examine 3D models
b. To rotate freely around the model, in the center of the Viewing window, click and drag the
cursor.
The model appears to rotate across axes according to your mouse movements.
c. To constrain the model rotation, click and drag along the top, bottom, left, or right edge of
the Viewing window.
If the cursor is near the left or right edge of the Viewing window when you begin, a horizontal
axis is used for rotation.
If the cursor is near the bottom edge, a vertical axis is used for rotation.
If the cursor is near the top edge, a perpendicular axis is used for rotation.
a. Click Pan .
a. Click Navigate .
b. In the Viewing window, click and drag up toward the top of the Viewing window then down
toward the bottom.
The navigation camera zooms in and out on the model.
2. Right-click the toolbar area of the application, and select 3D Standard Views.
The 3D Standard Views toolbar is displayed.
3. On the 3D Standard Views toolbar, click Align to Axis , and then choose a viewing angle.
2. Turn on antialiasing.
a. Right-click a blank area of the Viewing window and choose Preferences.
b. On the General tab of the Preferences dialog box, select the Antialiasing check box.
c. From the No. of samples list, choose the number of samples for antialiasing.
Nota
A higher number of samples results in smoother edges. However, using a higher
number of samples may also impact the performance of your system.
d. Select the Set as default check box to automatically apply your antialiasing settings when
you open 3D models.
Nota
Whenever you change your antialiasing settings, for the new settings to take
effect you must always display your model in a new Viewing window or close
and reopen the model.
Dica
A 2D image capture exactly matches what you see in the Viewing window, so you
may want to adjust the visibility and position of your model. You can also control
the dimensions of the image by changing the size of the Viewing window.
Dica
A resolution of 72 DPI is suitable for images to display on a monitor (e-mail and
web pages). Use a resolution of at least 300 DPI for print content.
c. Click OK.
d. In the Export Image save dialog box, browse to the location where you want to save your
image, and click Save.
Dica
An outline capture includes only what you see in the Viewing window, so you may
want to adjust the visibility of your model. Since the capture is a vector image,
the position of the model within the boundaries of the Viewing window does not
matter because you can scale the image with no loss of image quality. Any part
of the model that is turned off or outside of the Viewing window is not included in
the capture.
b. In the Save As dialog box, browse to the location where you want to save your image,
and click Save.
You can view properties of an assembly or part in the Properties dialog box, and you can add an
attribute from the Properties dialog box to the Assembly view as a new column of information for
part and assembly nodes.
1. In the Assembly view, right-click a part or assembly and choose Properties.
2. In the Properties dialog box, view the part or assembly properties on the respective properties
page.
Attributes
Geometry
Extent
Attributes page
The Attributes page of the Properties dialog box displays any metadata associated with the part or
assembly.
Dica
You can add an attribute from the Properties dialog box to the Assembly view as a new
column of information for part and assembly nodes.
Geometry page
The Geometry page of the Properties dialog box displays Area, Volume, Density, Mass, and
Center of mass for the part or assembly. For each property, a numeric annotation within curly
braces { } identifies the source of the value.
{2} Calculated
The JT model properties listed in {1} are not present. Therefore, an approximate value is
calculated from the polygonal data. The tilde ~ symbol appears in front of a calculated value.
BREP data is not used for the calculation.
{3} Default Measurement
The JT model property CAD_DENSITY is not present and the Density value has not been manually
entered. Therefore, the default density value as specified in the Calculations tab of the
Measurement Preferences dialog box is used.
{4} User-Defined
The Density value is manually entered.
Extent page
The Extent page of the Properties dialog box displays location and size information for the part or
assembly, including Min, Max, Center, Length X, Length Y, and Length Z.
b. Click Text .
d. In the Markup Text dialog box, type some text and click OK.
b. Click a part.
c. In the Markup Text dialog box, type some text and click OK.
b. In the Viewing window, click and drag the markups to new locations.
The anchored text markup has a leader line connecting it to the part.
6. Rotate your view to see how the two types of markups behave.
b. In the Session Save As dialog box, click Browse to specify the location where you want to
save the session file.
c. Click Save.
b. Click Preferences .
f. In the Edit Text dialog box, click <Callout>, click Add Key, and then click OK.
h. In the Callouts dialog box, in the Default Callout Format section, choose Numeric.
• Text
• Anchor Mode
b. On the 3D Markup toolbar, click Select and drag the callouts away from the parts.
c. In the Pre-defined Text section, click Edit, delete <Callout>, and click OK.
2. Right-click the toolbar area of the application, and select the following:
• 3D Measurement
• 3D Selection
The 3D Selection toolbar is displayed.
• Press Ctrl and on the 3D Selection toolbar, click Edge to make it the only active
selection filter.
• Press Ctrl and on the 3D Selection toolbar, click Surface to make it the only active
selection filter.
Save 3D measurements
b. Click Preferences .
b. On the 3D Selection toolbar, if Point is not the only active selection filter, press Ctrl and
click Point .
b. In the Session Save As dialog box, click Browse to specify the location where you want to
save the session file.
c. Click Save.
b. Choose File→Open.
2. In the Viewing window or the assembly tree, select the part to change (or hold Ctrl and select
multiple parts).
3. In the Quick Color dialog box, choose a color from the color well.
Create 3D snapshots
2. Choose Toolbars→Snapshots.
Nota
You can also use the Find command identify parts that match specified criteria.
2. Right-click the toolbar area of the application, and select 3D Visual Report.
e. To specify the category value, from the second list, choose Select.
f. An error message is displayed because you must first specify the parts that you want to
search for attribute values. Click OK to close the message.
All of the parts that match the query are displayed in red; unmatched parts turn
semi-transparent gray.
1. Open a 3D model and display the content that you want to include in the collaboration file, such
as parts, 3D markups, and groups.
Nota
Only what is visible in the Viewing window is included in the collaboration file.
Snapshots are not packaged in new collaboration files because they may reference
parts that are not currently visible, which may result in a reconcile problem for the
recipient of the file.
b. In the Packaged Collaboration File Preferences dialog box, from the Content section,
choose Active View and Lightweight.
c. Click OK.
Your work session is packaged as a .vfz file and attached to a new e-mail message.
View 2D images
1. Open a 2D image.
b. In the Viewing window, click and drag a box around an area of the image.
The selected area fills the window.
Compare 2D images
The second image overlays the base document image in the Viewing window. It also appears
in the Markup Layers section of the 2D tree.
c. From the First Layer list, choose one of the open images.
e. Click OK.
The image comparison is performed. A new layer called the compare layer is created. The
compare layer, which is black, shows only the common elements of the compared images.
The first layer image turns red; the second layer image turns green.
• To display the first layer only, on the 2D Compare toolbar, click Display 1st Layer .
• To display the second layer only, on the 2D Compare toolbar, click Display 2nd Layer .
• To display the compare layer only, on the 2D Compare toolbar, click Display Compare
Layer .
• To display all of the layers from the comparison, on the 2D Compare toolbar, click Display
All .
2. Right-click the toolbar area of the application, and select 3D Display Modes.
The 3D Display Modes toolbar is displayed.
d. To remove hidden lines from the model, click Hidden lines invisible .
1. Choose File→Open.
The Open dialog box is displayed.
b. On the Open dialog box, choose Tools→Add Current Location To User Areas.
b. On the left side of the Open dialog box, click User Areas.
Your user areas are displayed.
c. Click Apply.
b. Click OK.
The background color settings are saved.
• Right-click the view or window tab, choose Move and then select what you want to move from the
shortcut menu.
The window or view moves with your mouse pointer around the screen.
As you move the window or view the cursor changes to indicate where the view will be docked
when you release the mouse button. For example, indicates that the view will be placed at
the top of the window.
Nota
The stack cursor appears as you drag the view across other views indicating that you
can rearrange the views or move a view into the view group.
To Do this
Display a secondary view o On the upper right side of a primary
visualization view (the main Viewing window
that displays a 2D image or 3D model), click
the arrow and select a view.
Nota
To reset the Lifecycle Viewer to its default state, choose Window→Reset Perspective.
Assembly view
Use the Assembly view to work with 2D images, 3D models, and ECAD documents in the
Lifecycle Viewer.
Compare view
Use the Compare view to display ECAD document differences between two opened ECAD
documents. You can display differences from one design revision to other revisions, and you can
display differences between a PCB and its schematic design. When you highlight differences on the
Compare view, the ECAD object is centered and highlighted in the Viewing window. You can also
display differences by selecting View Differences from the compare shortcut menu.
Constraints view
Use the Constraints view to work with constraints in the Lifecycle Viewer.
Use the Cross Sections view to work with 3D cross sections in the Lifecycle Viewer.
Use the ECAD DFX view to work with ECAD rules-based analysis in the Lifecycle Viewer.
Use the ECAD Layer view to show, hide, and otherwise manipulate ECAD layers in the Lifecycle
Viewer.
Groups view
Use the Groups view to show, hide, and select part groups in the Lifecycle Viewer.
Navigator view
Use the Navigator view to zoom in quickly for a closer look at 2D images and 3D models in
the Lifecycle Viewer.
You can zoom and pan your view in the Viewing window by selecting a portion of the full view to
display in the Viewing window. The result is the same using Fit All and then Zoom Area in the
Viewing window.
1. In the Navigator view, place the cursor over a portion of the image or model.
You can pan your view in the Viewing window by picking a new lookat point in the full view without
zooming. This is similar to using Pan or Seek in the Viewing window, but with the Navigator view,
you can pick a lookat point that is outside of your Viewing window.
• In the Navigator view, click the point that you want to center in the Viewing window.
The view box moves to the portion of the image or model you select, and the view in the Viewing
window changes.
PMI view
Use the PMI view to manipulate Product and Manufacturing Information (PMI) in the Lifecycle
Viewer.
Paths view
Use the Paths view to work with motion documents in the Lifecycle Viewer.
Snapshots view
Use the Snapshots view to activate and manipulate snapshots of your 2D image or 3D model in
the Lifecycle Viewer.
Use the Image Preview view to display 2D raster images associated with items, item revisions,
and datasets in My Teamcenter.
JT Preview view
Use the JT Preview view to display .jt parts associated with items, item revisions, and datasets in
My Teamcenter.
Viewing window
You can create a new instance of the active visualization document view. When you have a
single document open in multiple views, while the session is active you can manipulate the model
independently in each Viewing window.
Exemplo
A single 3D model is displayed in two separate 3D views. Each view shows different parts
from the model, a different viewing angle, and unique 3D elements, such as a markup, a
measurement, and a cross section.
1. Click the 2D or 3D view that you want to send to a new window to make it active.
You can create an exact copy of the active visualization document view, including 3D elements
such as the current visibility state and markups.
1. Click the 3D view that you want to clone to make it active.
Nota
If the functions associated with a toolbar are not enabled, the toolbar buttons are grayed
out.
Dica
To change the display of all toolbars at once, choose Windows→Toolbars.
Move toolbars
1. Place the cursor on the handle of a visualization toolbar. The handle is the vertical line on the
left of the toolbar, as shown below:
2. In the Toolbars dialog box, click the name of a toolbar to display in the floating Toolbars
dialog window.
4. (Optional) To add another toolbar, right-click the background of the floating Toolbars dialog
window and choose a toolbar to add.
5. (Optional) To remove a toolbar, right-click the background of the floating Toolbars dialog window
and choose a toolbar to remove.
List of toolbars
2D Adjust toolbar
Use the command buttons on the 2D Adjust toolbar to adjust 2D markup layers and to align vector
and raster points associated with similar 2D files. The result of these 2D markup layer adjustments
appear in the Viewing window.
Nota
Click Reset again to clear all the adjustments
made to the selected layer, including adjustments
from the saved session.
2D Compare toolbar
Use the option buttons on the 2D Compare toolbar to compare 2D image layers in the Viewing
window.
You can use the GD&T Markup toolbar to insert 2D GD&T markups on 2D markup layers in the
Viewing window.
GD&T Annotation Editor Open the GD&T Annotation Editor dialog box.
2D Markup toolbar
You can use the markup option buttons on the 2D Markup toolbar to quickly mark up your 2D image.
You can also use the 2D Markup toolbar to access markup preferences.
Restricted Text Specify a bounding box you want your text to fit into.
2D Measurement toolbar
You can use the measurement options on the 2D Measurement toolbar to make angle, radial, and
linear measurements on the base file or on 2D markup layers.
2D Multipage toolbar
Use the 2D Multipage toolbar to navigate among pages in multiple-page 2D images or documents.
2D Viewing toolbar
Use the 2D Viewing toolbar to quickly manage or change how you view your image in the Viewing
window.
Zoom Out Move farther from your image in the Viewing window.
3D Alignment toolbar
Use the 3D Alignment toolbar to move individual parts or groups of parts and align them to other
parts in the Viewing window.
Accept Alignment Accept the current alignment and move the part.
Display an alternate alignment that conforms to
Next Alignment
the constraints.
3D Appearance toolbar
Edit Texture Coordinates Display the Texture page of the Appearance Editor.
Use the 3D CAE Viewing toolbar to set display options for your 3D model as well as annotation
appearance preferences.
Nota
Enable CAE Results
Viewing If no CAE data exists in your model, a warning
message is displayed when you attempt to
enable the CAE functionality.
Display Options Set color bar, lighting, and results display options.
Probe the 3D model for CAE results values at specific node
Identify
or element locations.
Annotations Annotate CAE results.
3D Clearance toolbar
Use the Clearance toolbar to check the clearance of parts in your model.
3D Comparison toolbar
Use the 3D Comparison toolbar to compare the geometry of two sets of parts or two or more models
in multiple Viewing windows.
3D Constraints toolbar
Use the 3D Constraints toolbar to add constraints and manage constraint files.
3D Groups toolbar
Add Group (Selected) Create a group that includes all the selected parts.
Single Group Only Display only the groups that are checked.
3D Markup toolbar
Use the 3D Markup toolbar to add text or graphical elements on your 3D model in the Viewing window.
Anchor Mode Attach the markups you draw to parts of the model.
3D Measurement toolbar
Nota
Reports
This button is only available if you have a product
that supports measurement reports.
3D MMV toolbar
Use the 3D MMV toolbar to control which parts of the 3D model are fully loaded. When in MMV
mode, you can choose to load complete parts for the entire 3D model, visible parts only, or selected
parts only.
3D Motion toolbar
Use the 3D Motion toolbar to manage motion documents.
Preview Quickly view the motion without modifying the play list.
Motion Playback Play motion documents and view the play list.
Movie Capture Preferences Set record and playback speeds and compression.
3D Navigation toolbar
Fit All Fit all visible parts of the model into the Viewing window.
Seek Center a point of the model. This point becomes the center of rotation.
3D Performance toolbar
Use the 3D Performance toolbar to change the performance preferences for your 3D model.
3D PMI toolbar
Use the PMI toolbar to display and control product and manufacturing information in your model.
Next Entity (For Single Entity Mode) Display the next PMI.
3D Section toolbar
Use the 3D Section toolbar to work with cross sections of your 3D model.
Align To Feature Align the cross section plane to a feature of the model.
Create Report
Nota
Only Perimeter and Area are available if the
model does not contain B-Rep data.
3D Selection toolbar
Use the 3D Selection toolbar to pick part features.
Disable Active Tool Disable the active tool, for example, 3D Measurement.
Select Parts by Volume Select parts within a volume that you define.
Pick Through Unshaded Pick geometry visible through parts displayed in the
Parts tessellated or feature lines display modes.
Generate Selection If it does not already exist, generate the data required for
Preview Data part feature selection preview.
3D Selection Preferences Change the settings for selection and selection preview.
Use the 3D Display Modes toolbar to control the display mode of geometry in the 3D Viewing
window. You can display geometry as shaded, tessellated lines, feature lines, or any combination
of the above. Tessellation or feature lines hidden by other geometry can be viewed as normal,
semi-transparent, or invisible.
Nota
Hidden lines invisible, Hidden lines ghosted and Hidden lines visible are only enabled
if the default display mode is set to Tessellation Lines, Feature Lines, or both. The
default display mode can be set on the Display page of the 3D Viewing preferences dialog
box, or on the 3D Display Modes toolbar when no parts are selected. If any parts are
selected, changing the display mode with the toolbar only changes the display mode for
the selected parts.
Draw feature lines Display geometry in the feature line rendering style.
Hidden lines invisible Remove hidden tessellation or feature lines from view.
Display hidden tessellation or feature lines in a
Hidden lines ghosted
semi-transparent rendering style.
Use the 3D True Shading toolbar to quickly change the appearance of 3D models via predefined
visual effects.
3D Visibility toolbar
Use the 3D Visibility toolbar to hide obscuring parts and clip areas of your model.
Hide Jacks Hide the motion jacks, but not the manipulators.
Use the 3D Visual Report toolbar options to create visual reports and apply them to the parts and
assemblies. For example, you can search the properties of parts and create a visual report that
shows all metal parts in a specific color. You can also reset the appearance of parts and assemblies,
as well as specify visual report preferences.
Single Report Use the Single Rule Report dialog box to generate
metadata search conditions and to specify how you want
matched and unmatched parts displayed.
Open the Multiple Rules Report dialog box.
Multiple Reports Use the Multiple Rules Report dialog box to generate
multiple metadata search conditions.
Use the ECAD Base toolbar to manage specific ECAD functionality such as specifying side views,
changing layer characteristics, navigating nets, creating reports, and setting cross probing for both
the PCB and schematic.
Use the DFx toolbar to manage how you want to evaluate and analyze your designs against
manufacturing rules.
Nota
Most of these options require a DFx authoring license.
Text Open the Text Editor dialog box and add text markups.
Open the Rubber Stamp dialog box. Select either
Rubber Stamp auto-translate selected predefined text or select existing
predefined text from a note file.
(PCB only) Measure the distance between one point to
Distance Measurement another point, between one point to a specific location on a
line, or between one line and another line.
(PCB only) Measure the radial distance on any ring or
Radial Measurement
circle.
(PCB only) Measure the minimum distance between two
Clearance Measurement
objects.
(PCB only) Measure the distance between any point along
the trace and via contained within the same net.
Use the ECAD Viewing toolbar to quickly manage or change how you view ECAD documents.
Base View Size the view to the extents of the PCB dimensions.
Display the name of ECAD objects as you move the cursor
Browse
around the Viewing window.
Zoom Area Zoom to a specific area of the document.
You can use the Image Capture toolbar to capture the view of your image exactly as it is displayed in
the Viewing window, including all visible markups. The captured image appears in a new Viewing
window.
Issues toolbar
Nota
Delete
If working with Teamcenter visual issues, the
issue report and issue report revision are
deleted.
Printing toolbar
You can use the Printing toolbar to quick preview and print models and images.
Reconcile toolbar
Use the Reconcile toolbar to resolve broken file references to parts and assemblies.
Snapshots toolbar
Use the Snapshots toolbar to add and manipulate snapshots of your model or image.
2D and ECAD 3D
Use the Tree Control toolbar to navigate the list in the Assembly view.
Collapse One Hide the lowest level of the list that is currently showing.
Overview of menus
The menu bar provides access to much of the application's functionality. You can also right-click items
and areas to access shortcut menus.
Nota
Menus are available only in the Lifecycle Viewer. You must use toolbars to access
visualization features when working in the viewers that are embedded within Teamcenter
applications such as My Teamcenter and Structure Manager.
List of menus
Actions menu
The Actions menu is on the Menu bar. Some options are available only when a 2D or 3D file is open.
Open a 2D image and then add a new layer to the Base Document. The Adjust menu appears
on the Menu bar when you enable Adjust from the Tools menu.
Nota
Click Reset again to clear
all the adjustments made to
Reset the selected layer, including
Open the selected 2D image adjustments from the saved
layer by opening a session (VF) session.
file or PVL file, and then click
The markup layer returns to
Reset.
its original position.
Click Reset a third time
returns the selected layer
back to the saved session
position. In other words,
clicking Reset switches the
markup layer between a
"clear" and an "as-loaded"
state.
Use the Alignment menu to align parts of 3D models to other parts. The Alignment menu appears
on the Menu bar when you choose Alignment from the Tools menu.
Assembly menu
Use the Assembly menu to work with the assembly in the Assembly view. The Assembly menu is
on the Menu bar when you choose Assembly from the Tools menu.
The CAE Viewing menu appears on the Menu bar when you choose CAE Viewing from the Tools
menu.
Clearance menu
Use the Clearance menu to identify the clearance of elements in 3D models. The Clearance menu
appears on the Menu bar when you choose Clearance from the Tools menu.
Stop on Collision
Nota
This option is available only if Dynamic Clearance is selected.
Generate a list of all elements within the clearance distance of any element.
Group to Group Set up and compare multiple groups of data while avoiding checks
Clearance between elements within the same group or group set.
Selected Clearance Check for elements within the clearance distance of the selected part.
Specify which parts to check when you check clearance.
• All Elements checks all elements in your model file.
Scope • Loaded Elements checks all elements in your model file that are
loaded.
Visibility Action • Show Elements displays elements within the clearance distance.
• Find finds text strings in the results that are visible in the General
Clearance Results window.
• Clear All clears the list that appears in the General Clearance
Results window.
• Save All saves the list that appears in the General Clearance Results
window, as well as any items that have been filtered, as a .txt file.
• Save Visible saves the list that appears in the General Clearance
Results window as a .txt file.
• Load opens a clearance results list that has been saved in a previous
Results work session or a Clearance Database Connection (.dbc) file.
• Post All Issues posts all the issues listed in the General Clearance
Results window to the visual issues list on your Community
Collaboration site.
• Remove All Issues removes all the issues listed in the General
Clearance Results window from the visual issues list on your
Community Collaboration site.
Nota
Navigation Generate a results list containing multiple results for all elements
within a clearance distance or elements within a clearance
distance of a selected part to navigate between results. The
Clearance Navigation & Analysis dialog box must be open
and contain multiple regions of contact or penetration to
navigate between regions.
• Part Creation Date specifies the attribute that identifies the creation
date of a part, as well as the format of the date.
• Zones specifies the list of zones that have been defined by your
company for the model.
Comparison menu
You can use the Comparison menu to display differences between two part sets or Viewing windows.
The Comparison menu is on the Menu bar when a 3D model file is in the active Viewing window
and you choose Tools→Comparison.
• Set Part Group 2: Set your second set of parts for comparison.
Concept menu
Constraint menu
Use the Constraint menu to constrain parts in an assembly and manage constraint files. The
Constraint menu appears on the Menu bar when you choose Constraint from the Tools menu.
DFx menu
The DFx menu is accessible from the Tools menu when an ECAD image is opened in the Viewing
window.
Save the active rules file and results. You will be prompted for a new
Save As
dataset name.
Edit menu
The Edit menu appears in the Menu bar when a file is open. Edit menu items are available when
markups are selected.
File menu
Nota
If the environment variable EAI_EXPORT_COMBINED_VI-
SIBLE is set to YES, all visible layers are combined in this
operation, whether or not they are selected.
You can use the GD&T Markup menu to control how GD&T markups appear in the Viewing window.
The GD&T Markup menu appears on the Menu bar when you choose GD&T Markup from the
Tools menu.
Groups menu
Use the Groups menu to create sets of visible parts (groups), and display, hide, or select each group.
The Groups menu appears on the first level of the Menu bar when you choose Tools→Groups to
activate the Groups menu.
Use this option To do this
Add Selected Create a new group from the parts that are selected in the Viewing window.
Add Visible Create a new group from the parts that are currently visible.
Copy to Alt. Hierarchy Create an assembly of the active group in the Assembly tree.
Delete Delete the selected group from the Groups view.
Edit Group
Change the appearance of the parts in the selected group.
Appearance
Full Subtract Change the way group parts are hidden.
Rename Rename the selected group from the Groups view.
Replace the parts in the selected group with the parts that are selected in
Replace Selected
the Viewing window.
Replace the parts in the selected group with the parts that are currently
Replace Visible
visible in the Viewing window.
Single Group Mode Display, hide, or select the parts in only one group at a time.
Use Group Display the parts in groups with the appearance you set with the Edit
Appearance Group Appearance option.
Help menu
Use the Help menu to access the information you need to use the software.
The 2D Markup menu appears on the Menu bar when a 2D image file is in the active Viewing window
and you choose Markup from the Tools menu.
The Markup menu appears on the menu bar when a 3D file is in the active Viewing window, and
you choose Tools→Markup.
The Measurement menu appears on the Menu bar when a 2D image is in the Viewing window
and when you choose Tools→Measurement.
The Measurement menu appears on the Menu bar when you open a 3D file and enable 3D
Measurement from the Tools menu.
The Part Edit menu is on the Menu bar when you choose Part Edit from the Tools menu.
PMI menu
The PMI menu is on the menu bar when a 3D model file is in the active Viewing window and you
choose PMI from the Tools menu.
Use the PMI menu to display product and manufacturing information (PMI) that is attached to your
model.
Feature-based Nota
Multiple Entity Mode
If you use this option and the JT model does not contain a
feature level, PMI is displayed from the selected face and all
its edges.
Reconcile menu
Use the Reconcile menu to resolve broken references to parts and assemblies. The Reconcile
menu appears in the Menu bar when you choose Reconcile from the Tools menu.
Nota
Mapping rules record of how the broken references were
resolved, and they are retained in session files. Resolving
broken references for the externally stored Visualization files
Delete All Mapping such as VFM, Constraints, and VAN files require mapping rules.
Rules
You can remove the mapping rules from the session file to
reduce the size of a session file. References that are already
resolved in the session will remain resolved, but removing the
rules affects working with the externally stored Visualization files
such as motion (.vfm), constraint (.plmxml), and animation (.van)
files. For that reason, this command should be used sparingly.
Section3D menu
The Section3D menu appears on the Menu bar when a 3D model is in the active Viewing window
and you choose Section3D from the Tools menu.
Report
Nota
Only Perimeter and Area are available if the model does not
contain B-Rep data.
Snapshots menu
The Snapshots menu is on the Menu bar when you choose Snapshots from the Tools menu.
Nota
Menu options vary depending on the type of file you are working with. For example, when
you work with 3D snapshots you can cycle through the snapshots, change the view
between thumbnail images and a list, and set 3D snapshot preferences.
Cycle Nota
This feature is supported by 3D snapshots.
Preferences Nota
This feature is supported by 3D snapshots.
Tools menu
Use the Tools menu to enable and use various features of the software.
Some options are available only when files of a particular type are in the active Viewing window.
Adjust Nota
When you open a 2D image and add a layer, this menu option
becomes available.
Thrustline menu
The Thrustline menu appears on the Menu bar when you open a 3D file and enable Thrustlines
from the Tools menu.
Use the View menu to manage or change how you view 2D images in the Viewing window. A
separate menu is available for 3D viewing. Some options are available only when files of a particular
type are open.
Define an area of your 2D image and zoom to fit that area in the Viewing
Zoom Area
window.
Seek Center a point of your 2D image in the viewing window.
Pan Move your 2D image around in the plane of the Viewing window.
Zoom Move closer to or farther from your 2D image.
Zoom a proportional amount closer to or farther from your 2D image in
the Viewing window.
Zoom Scale • Use Zoom In to move closer to your 2D image in the Viewing window.
•
Use Zoom Out to move farther from your 2D image in the Viewing
window.
Zoom - Drawing Scale Zoom to standard drawing scales, for example, 1:4, 1:2, 1:1, 2:1, and 4:1.
Rotate or flip the view of your image.
• Rotate Counterclockwise: Rotate the view 90 degrees
counterclockwise.
Use the View menu to manage or change how you view 3D images in the Viewing window. A
separate menu is available for 2D viewing. Some options are available only when files of a particular
type are open.
• Selected On: Display parts that are selected in the assembly tree.
(When Control by Selected is not active.)
• Visited On: Display all parts that you have explicitly made visible
during the work session.
Visibility • Invert Visibility: Swap the visibility state of parts that you have
explicitly made visible during the work session.
• Show Edges: Display feature or B-Rep edges for the selected parts.
• Hide Edged: Hide feature or B-Rep edges for the selected parts.
• Hide All: Hide all edges and vertices for all parts.
• Hide Obscuring: Hide parts that obscure your view of other parts.
• Select Parts by Area: Select parts within an area that you define.
• Select Parts by Volume: Select parts within a volume that you define.
• Generate Selection Preview Data: Load the B-Rep data required for
previewing part feature selection.
Orthographic Display an orthographic view of your model.
Perspective Display a perspective view of your model.
Page Extents Enable page extents functionality to size 3D entities relative to a 2D space.
Preferences Specify 3D viewing and selection preferences.
Performance Change the 3D Viewing options to improve the viewing quality.
Specify part display mode options.
• Clear display modes: Reset the display modes for all parts.
Part Display Modes • Set all occurrences: Apply display modes to all instances of selected
parts.
• Show confirmation dialog: Confirm that you want to reset the display
modes for all parts.
Open the Toolbars dialog box to:
Use the Visual Report menu options to create visual reports and apply them to the parts and
assemblies.
Single Rule Report Use the Single Rule Report dialog box to generate metadata search
conditions and to specify how you want matched and unmatched parts
displayed.
Open the Multiple Rules Report dialog box.
Multiple Rules Report Use the Multiple Rules Report dialog box to generate metadata search
conditions.
Open the Results Legend dialog box.
Use the Results Legend dialog box to display detailed information about
Results Legend processed visual reports. This information includes details as the current
rule name and scope, names of parts, and the attributes and values used
in the report.
Open the Report Explore dialog box.
Report Explore Use the Report Explore dialog box to set options for how you view the
results of your visual report.
Reset Appearance Discard visual changes and return to the original visual representation.
Preferences Specify the default options for various visual reports preferences.
Window menu
Use the options from the Window menu to create a new instance of the 2D or 3D Viewing window or
clone the 3D Viewing window.
Nota
New Window If you have created copies of the file with the New Window
option, and then you choose Close, all windows that contain
the file in the active window close. To close a Viewing window
without closing other Viewing windows that display the same file,
click the X in the upper right corner of the Viewing window.
Create the same 3D view window as with New Window, but also apply
Clone Window (3D)
view-based information from the active 3D view being cloned.
Shortcut menus
Shortcut menus are accessed by right-clicking items in locations, such as the assembly view. They
provide quick access to much of the application's functionality.
• The anti-aliasing method (hardware or software) along with the current number of samples
being used in the Viewing window.
• The loading progress of the 3D assembly. For example, when loading parts you will see file
names appear in the Status bar, and the number of remaining shapes to load (with a time
estimate for completion).
Choosing colors
When you select an option that involves choosing colors, you can choose from a palette of standard
colors or create custom colors.
Windows
To Do this
Choose a color from the
Click a color.
standard color palette
1. Click Other to open the Color dialog box with a larger palette.
3. Click OK.
To Do this
1. Click Other to open the Color dialog box.
2. In the color shader section, drag the mouse pointer until the
color preview displays the correct color (hue and saturation).
3. Drag the luminosity slider up and down until the color preview
displays the correct brightness.
5. Click OK.
1. Click Other to open the Color dialog box.
To Do this
3. (Optional) To save your custom color for future use, click Add
to Custom Colors.
The color in the Color window appears in the Custom colors
list on the left side of the Color dialog box.
4. Click OK.
Nota
Images and parts are displayed according to the order specified in the tcgrb.properties
file (for 2D images) and the tctdv.properties file (for .jt parts).
Preview images
Preview 2D raster images in the Image Preview view.
1. (If you do not have a tab for the Image Preview view) Choose Window→Show
View→Other→Teamcenter→Image Preview.
2. Select an item, item revision, dataset, or other object associated with a 2D image.
The image is displayed in the Image Preview view.
Nota
• The Image Preview view supports raster images only, such as bitmap (.bmp),
JPEG (.jpg, jpeg), and TIFF (.tif, .tiff) files. Vector formats are not supported.
Dica
The Image Preview view provides a basic preview of 2D raster images. To view vector
images or work with additional 2D visualization functionality, right-click the object
and choose Send To→Lifecycle Viewer.
2. Select an item, item revision, dataset, or other object associated with a .jt file.
To Do this
Rotate the camera around the part In the background of the view, drag the cursor.
Press Ctrl and then in the background of the
Pan the camera along the current plane
view drag the cursor.
Press Shift and then in the background of the
Zoom the camera
view drag the cursor.
Nota
• The JT Preview view can display only one .jt dataset at a time.
Dica
• If a dataset is revised while active in the JT Preview view, right-click the dataset
and choose Refresh to see the latest changes.
• The JT Preview view provides a basic preview of .jt parts. To work with additional
3D visualization functionality, right-click the object and choose Send To→Lifecycle
Viewer.
A primary document:
• Consists of data that has been translated from some master source data such as a CAD file.
• Consists of one file (for example, a 2D image) or a logical set of files (for example, assembly
and part files).
• May have secondary types of documents that depend on it, but may not be aware of these
secondary files.
A secondary document:
• May contain many types of data which may serve different purposes (for example, a snapshot
consists of layer data, view data, motion data, thumbnail data, and so forth).
Nota
The options to send Teamcenter managed visualization data to the stand-alone viewer may
not be shown by default on the user interface of the rich client or the thin client. For these
options to be displayed, you must enable them using the Lifecycle Visualization options in
the rich client or the TC_show_open_in_vmu_button preference.
To Do this
Send any of the following to the stand-alone
viewer: o (Rich client) Select the object and do one
o An item or item revision that includes of the following:
visualization data ■ On the My Teamcenter toolbar, click
Start/Open In Lifecycle Visualization
o A BOM view
.
o Selected product structure
■ Choose File→Open in Lifecycle
o 4GD worksets Visualization.
o A 3D dataset such as a JT file o (Thin client) Select the check box for
the object you want to open and choose
o A 2D or ECAD dataset such as an image View→Teamcenter Visualization.
or PCB file
Send any of the following to the Lifecycle
Viewer:
o An item or item revision that includes
visualization data o (Rich client only) Right-click the object and
click Send To→Lifecycle Viewer.
o A BOM view
Nota
o Selected product structure
You can open data in the
o 4GD worksets Lifecycle Viewer only from the
rich client.
o A 3D dataset such as a JT file
If you are using the rich client, the file opens in the viewer. If you are using the thin client, a VVI
file is launched. The VVI file contains the information necessary for the stand-alone viewer to
open the file. Click Open to open the visualization file in the viewer.
• Right-click the product structure and choose Send To→Lifecycle Viewer to send the product
structure to the Lifecycle Viewer.
To send a full product structure to the visualization client, select the root or top line of the product
structure. To send a partial product structure, select any child nodes within the root product structure
hierarchy. Partial product structure consists of the lines representing the unique paths down to
the selected structure.
Nota
When working with partial product structures, the following limitations apply:
• You can expand only the child hierarchy of the launched lines.
• All viewer operations, such as filters and clearance analysis, are applicable only for
the launched lines.
Nota
Teamcenter applications such as Structure Manager include view toggles that enable you
to see BOM lines that are configured out because of effectivity or variants. The view toggle
Show Suppressed Occurrences enables you to see BOM lines that are suppressed
in the current assembly arrangement. If you send an assembly to the stand-alone
application viewer or the Lifecycle Viewer when this view toggle is on, the suppressed
structure elements are grayed out. If you open a product view that captured suppressed
occurrences, an inactive structure warning is displayed. To avoid this problem, set the
Product View Creation Preferences to prevent the creation of product views when the
Show Suppressed Occurrences view toggle is enabled.
The steps required to insert or merge files vary slightly depending upon the applications involved.
When working with local data in the stand-alone viewer, you must use the Application toolbar
Menu→File→Insert or File→Merge commands. When working with Teamcenter managed data, you
send the data you want to insert or merge into the stand-alone viewer or the Lifecycle Viewer, and
then specify how you want to open the data in the Load Option Preferences dialog box.
2. In the Load Option Preferences dialog box, choose from the following preferences:
• On the 3D tab:
In this
Select this To
section
Do one of the following:
o Open the document in a new window.
Open document
o (If the document is already open in a
window) display the window.
Insert document into active Insert the data into the currently active
window window.
Merge the data into the currently active
window.
Nota
You can merge product structure
Product
only if the data being sent is
Structure
compatible with the contents of
the active Viewing window. For
Merge document into active structure to merge, the data being
window sent to the visualization client and
the data in the active Viewing
window must share the following
structure configuration properties:
o Revision rule
In this
Select this To
section
Ask at load time Select your options each time you open a file.
Open with markups Open markups associated with the data.
Markups
Ask at load time Select your options each time you open a file.
• On the 2D tab:
Select this To
Do one of the following:
o Open the document in a new window.
Open document
o (If the document is already open in a
window) display the window.
Insert the data into the currently active
Insert document into active window
window.
Ask at load time Select your options each time you open a file.
Open with markups Open markups associated with the data.
Ask at load time Select your options each time you open a file.
Select this To
Do one of the following:
o Open the document in a new window.
Open document
o (If the document is already open in a
window) display the window.
Insert the data into the currently active
Insert documents into active window
window.
Ask at load time Select your options each time you open a file.
Nota
• Selections are persisted each time the dialog box opens.
• The default settings for the Load Option Preferences dialog box are Ask at load
time and Merge document into active window.
• For 3D, for If merge is not possible the default is Open document.
• If you choose Ask at load time, you can use the load option preference to change
how you want to open files.
Dica
Right-click the embedded viewer toolbar area to turn on additional visualization
toolbars.
4. In the BOM Line, select the check box for the part or assembly you want to view.
Dica
Right-click the embedded viewer toolbar area to turn on additional visualization
toolbars.
2. In the Assembly view, right-click the product structure or parts and choose Send to My
Teamcenter.
-or-
In the Viewing window, right-click the geometry and choose Send to My Teamcenter.
The associated item revision is opened in My Teamcenter.
2. In the File Open Preferences dialog box, choose one of the following for each file type:
• 2D
• 3D
• Prompt
Nota
• This functionality is supported in Standard service levels and above. For Base service
levels, these files always open as 2D file types.
2. In the PLMXML Preferences dialog box, on the Load page, select a unit of measurement for
PLMXML Units.
Nota
• The PLM XML Units setting is saved in session files. If you change and save the model
units setting with a VF file, the specified model units of the session file override the
current PLMXML Units setting.
• Session files referencing PLM XML models that were created prior to Teamcenter
lifecycle visualization 5.1.0.2, do not contain the model units specification. The
software uses the current PLMXML Units setting on the Load page of the PLM XML
Preferences dialog box if you load the session file with a newer viewer. This event
may result in content displayed in the wrong scale. The model units is always meters
for pre-5.1.0.2 PLM XML files.
As a work around, migrate the session file to a Teamcenter lifecycle visualization
5.1.0.2 version. Load and save the file in Teamcenter lifecycle visualization 5.1.0.2.
• The session file and all referenced data are replicated on another site in the network.
• The session file is loaded into Teamcenter Visualization from the replica site.
To prevent session update failures in Teamcenter Visualization, update the File Locate preferences
as follows:
1. Choose File→Preferences→File Locate.
2. In the AutoFile Search Preferences dialog box, click the Document Search Order tab.
4. Click Move Up to position Relative File Directory Set above Original File Directory Set
in the list.
6. Click OK.
• Search Log
2. On the General tab of the AutoFile Search Preferences dialog box, choose from the following:
To Do this
Choose Always ask.
Nota
• The File Usage Confirmation dialog box is displayed only for primary documents
such as top level assembly files that link to separate JT files, not to the shattered
JT files themselves.
• For Directory Sets on the Document Search Order tab, if Auto Confirm is turned on,
the File Usage Confirmation dialog box is never displayed.
1. Specify general loading preferences to display the File Usage Confirmation dialog box when
locating files.
When you open a document that contains references to an external file that cannot be found,
the program searches for the file according to preferences specified on the Document Search
Order tab.
To Do this
Click Show Details.
Display the search report
Detailed search information is displayed.
Confirm located files Click Use Selected Location.
Manually locate files Click Browse, and locate the file that you want to load.
Do one of the following:
Cancel the file search • (To cancel for multiple files) Click Cancel All.
operation
• (To cancel for a single file) Click Cancel.
Exemplo
If you save a session file that references a 3D model, and then move the model to another
location, the Document Search Order tab can help you find and access the model.
2. On the Document Search Order tab of the AutoFile Search Preferences dialog box, do any
of the following:
To Do this
Change the Directory Set
Select a Directory Set, and click Move Up or Move Down.
search order
Enable or disable a
Select the Directory Set, and click Enable / Disable.
Directory Set
Select a Directory Set, and click Auto Confirm.
Specify to load files
automatically from a Nota
Directory Set if a match is
Auto Confirm supersedes the preferences specified
found
on the General tab.
2. On the Document Search Order tab of the AutoFile Search Preferences dialog box, select
User-defined Directory Set, and click Edit.
To Do this
a. In the Extensions section, click Add.
Nota
Associate file types with To specify directories that you want to search but do
directories not want to attach to a specific file type extension,
select Unatt (unattached).
To Do this
In the Directories for Selected Extension section, select a
directory, and click Auto Confirm.
Dica
As more file locations are added to the Automatic Directory Set, you can manually remove
them from the list. Older locations are automatically removed if the list becomes too long.
2. In the AutoFile Search Preferences dialog box, on the Document Search Order tab, select
Automatic Directory Set and click Edit.
3. In the Extensions section of the Automatic Directory Set dialog box, select a file type.
The Directories for Selected Extension section displays the directories where files of the
selected type were found.
To Do this
Add a location to the Select a location, and click Move to User Set.
User-defined Directory
Set In the User-defined Directory Set, the location is added to the list
of directories to search.
Delete a directory from the In the Directories for Selected Extension section, select a
list location, and click Delete.
Delete the file type and all In the Extensions section, click Delete.
associated directories
Delete all displayed In the Extensions section, click Clear All.
extensions and directories
Exemplo
If you save a 3D model with sub-part assemblies as a shattered JT file, creating individual
JT files for each sub-part, and then move the sub-part files to another location, the Part
Search Order preferences can help you find and load the files.
2. On the Part Search Order tab of the AutoFile Search Preferences dialog box, do any of the
following:
To Do this
Change the Directory Set
Select a Directory Set, and click Move Up or Move Down.
search order
Enable or disable the
Select the User-defined Directory Set, and click Enable / Disable.
User-defined Directory Set
a. Select User-defined Directory Set, and click Edit.
Edit the User-defined
Directory Set b. In the User-defined Part Loading Directory Set dialog box,
click Add, and add a location that you want searched for parts.
Reset the search order
preferences to the default Click Reset to Default.
settings
Select the Consider all changes to this tab as temporary (will
Make temporary changes
be reset after application exit check box.
2. On the Search Log tab of the AutoFile Search Preferences dialog box, do one of the following:
To Do this
a. Select an entry from the list of search results, and click Show
Details.
Display detailed search
information b. In the Search Trace dialog box, select an entry, and click
Show Details.
The details of your selection are displayed.
To Do this
a. Select an entry from the list of search results, and click Show
Details.
Select an entry from the list of search results, and click Delete.
Remove files from the list -or-
Click Delete All.
Nota
Generating part logging information results in longer part loading times.
2. On the Search Log tab of the AutoFile Search Preferences dialog box, click Part Logging.
To Do this
Choose one of the following:
• Nothing
Nota
To control the number of entries added to the search
log, in the Maximum number of logging events to
record box, type a value. Very large values may cause
out of memory errors.
Dica
You also can save AutoFile Search preferences as an .xml file to review your current
settings. However, the application loads .vfp files only.
2. In the AutoFile Search Preferences dialog box, on the General tab, do one of the following:
To Do this
Save AutoFile Search a. Click Save Preferences.
preferences
b. In the Select file to save to dialog box, save the file.
Load AutoFile Search a. Click Load Preferences.
preferences
b. In the Select preference file to open dialog box, open a .vfp
file.
Nota
Loading a preferences file overwrites the current
preferences.
• Snapshot information
• 3D preferences
• Cross sections
• 3D Measurements
• 3D layers
• Teamcenter revision rules, effectivity, variant rules, active assembly arrangements, and other
configuration settings.
Exemplo
You are working with model1.jt, model2.jt, and image.tif. You have created snapshots,
changed background colors, and created markup layers. You then save your work as a
.vf session file.
When you re-open the session file, the three files open, and the snapshots, background
colors, and markup layers appear as they were when you saved the session.
Session files reference primary and secondary documents. A session file can preserve the state of
multiple primary documents, and each primary document may be associated with multiple secondary
documents.
• Attach to Selected Bomline - Save the session within the item revision of the selected BOM
line in the 3D assembly tree.
• Alternate Location - Save the session to a different location. Click Browse, and then specify the
folder, item, or item revision within which you want to save the session.
Nota
You can use the Teamcenter Integration Session preferences to specify default session
save options.
3. To rename the session file or any secondary documents that you have created during your work
session and not yet saved, such as markup layers or motion documents, double-click the default
name of the document and type a new name.
Nota
You cannot use any non-ASCII character (including 8 bit accented Western European
and multi-byte characters) for a file name.
4. Click Save.
The session file is saved. Any new or unsaved secondary documents are also saved with the
session file to their specified locations.
Nota
• If you have unsaved clearance results, the Save Clearance Results As dialog
box appears. You must save to a .txt file to reference the results in a session file.
Configured structure
The following scenarios result in a configured structure in the viewer:
• From My Teamcenter or the thin client, launch a BOM view or BOM view revision (or any object
that includes a BOM view or BOM view revision, such as an item or item revision) into the
stand-alone viewer or the Lifecycle Viewer. The structure is configured in the viewer according to
your default revision rule.
• From the stand-alone viewer, open a BOM view or BOM view revision (or any object that includes
a BOM view or BOM view revision, such as an item or item revision). The structure is configured
in the viewer according to your default revision rule.
• From Structure Manager, Multi-Structure Manager, or Manufacturing Process Planner in the rich
client, launch one or more BOM lines into the stand-alone viewer or the Lifecycle Viewer. The
structure is configured in the viewer according to whatever configuration is currently active in
the launching application.
• From Structure Manager or Manufacturing Process Planner in the thin client, launch one or more
BOM lines into the stand-alone viewer. The structure is configured in the viewer according to
whatever configuration is currently active in the launching application.
Static structure
The following scenarios result in a static structure in the viewer:
• Perform any process that results in opening a PLM XML file in the stand-alone viewer or the
Lifecycle Viewer. For example, launching a QL file or a DirectModelAssembly dataset results
in the loading of a PLM XML file into the viewer. The viewer treats these data types as static
structure, since a session file authored in the viewer references the static PLM XML.
• Open a VF session file that points to static PLM XML. This occurs under the following conditions:
o The Capture Static Structure check box is selected when the session file is authored.
o The structure in the viewer is saved as PLM XML (File→Save As) before the session is
authored.
Opening a session dataset can result in the loading of a static structure or a configured structure,
depending upon the data and the conditions under which the session authored.
When you save a session referencing configured structure, the session preserves the product
structure configuration active in the viewer. However, if you select the Capture Static Structure
check box in the Session Save As dialog box, the viewer also saves the exact product structure you
have open at the time you save the session. When you load the session later, the viewer detects if
this static structure is available and asks you how you want to open it: as a static structure (the exact
product structure that was active in the viewer at the time the session was saved) or a configured
structure (according to the configuration settings in effect at the time the session was saved). Note
that if the Capture Static Structure check box is not selected when you initially save the session,
when you open the session later the structure is loaded dynamically based on the configuration in
effect at the time the session was saved.
You can set a Teamcenter Integration Preference to automatically handle this when loading a
session. You can choose to:
• Always load the static structure
• Always load the configured structure (the latest version of the structure according to the
configuration settings in effect at the time the session was saved)
3. Click Merge.
The saved session is merged with the contents of the active session.
2. In the Session Preferences dialog box, change any of the following settings:
Nota
If this option is
not turned on,
the sessions are
opened in separate
Viewing windows.
3. Click OK.
Understanding the differences between session files and PLM XML files
When you create alternate hierarchies, add 3D markups to your model, or create snapshots that
contain extended 3D information (for example, camera orientations or behaviors), you can save
your work using either the .vf or .plmxml file types. With .vf and .plmxml formats you can save the
information that cannot be included in file types that you initially read into the application, such
as .jt files.
In Teamcenter lifecycle visualization, both .vf documents and .plmxml documents can contain
extended session data (for example, materials, markups, and sections) as well as product structure.
However, the .vf file type is a binary format that cannot be created or altered outside Teamcenter
lifecycle visualization, while the .plmxml file type is XML, and as long as the contents of the file are
structured according to the PLM XML schema it can be created using any text editor.
The following terms are related to saving your work within Teamcenter lifecycle visualization:
Model Exemplo
A single assembly within a JT file.
Exemplo
Extended content
3D information, such as visibility,
transforms, materials, lights, sections,
behaviors, and markups.
Exemplo
Snapshot
Captured 3D information, such as
visibility, transforms, materials, lights,
sections, behaviors, and markups.
Exemplo
• A PLM XML file. A .plmxml
document is product structure
and (optionally) extended content
Document
associated with that document.
Session documents (.vf) can be saved from the File menu using the Save Session or Save Session
As options. PLM XML documents can be saved from the menu using the Save As and Export
options. You can use the Save As option to create a PLM XML file that preserves all supported
content from the active 3D Viewing window. Use the Export option to increase control over what is
persisted in the PLM XML file. You can specify what supported content to include and what supported
content to leave out of the exported file.
When saving session files, any derived documents that have not been saved at the time of the
session save, such as markups layers or motion documents, are saved with the session file to the
same location.
Nota
You must save session packages on your local network or file system.
4. Click Browse and select the folder on your local machine where you want to save the file.
Nota
You can save attachments only as session packages. If you have added attachments to
the work session, the Save As Session Package check box is selected automatically.
6. If you do not want to include a document in the package, clear the check box beside the
document in the Package column.
7. If you want to save the most recent version of configured product structure, select the Capture
static structure check box.
8. Click Save.
9. (If you turned on password protection) In the Password Option dialog box, type a password and
then click OK.
The session package is created and saved on your local machine.
Nota
Visualization files active in the session, such as open 2D or 3D files and layers, are
automatically included in the session package and do not need to be manually attached.
Attachments enable you to include files that are related but not compatible with Teamcenter
lifecycle visualization, such as spreadsheets or product specifications. When the session
package is opened, you can launch the attachments in their respective applications.
1. Choose File→Attachments.
3. In the Choose attachment file location dialog box, choose the file you want to attach to your
session package, and click Open.
The name of the file appears in the attachment list.
Nota
To delete an attachment, select the attachment, and then click Remove.
2. Choose File→Attachments.
3. In the Attachments dialog box, select the attachment and then click Open.
The attachment opens in the application associated with the file type.
4. (Optional) To save a copy of the attachment, select the attachment and then click Save Copy.
2. On the General tab of the AutoFile Search Preferences dialog box, click Ask only when
multiple matches are found.
3. On the Document Search Order tab, select Relative File Directory Set and click Move Up
until the selection is the first item in the list.
4. Click OK.
Once you have resolved the broken references, you can re-save the file. You can also export a
mapping file and use it to resolve broken references in other files.
To Do this
The Reconcile References Dialog dialog box appears. Broken references are shown in the tree.
2. (If you have more that one document open in the session) In the Reconcile Scope section of the
dialog box, select the document to work with from the Document list.
3. (Optional) If the dialog box appears because of broken references in a snapshot or group,
you can select the Context only check box to filter the tree to show only broken references
referenced by the snapshot or group.
• If the candidate is not on the list, use Find to search for other candidates, and then select
the candidate.
• Select the candidate part or assembly node in the assembly tree in the Project Workspace
window.
• If the broken node is no longer needed, and you want to permanently delete the reference
from the tree and the session, click Ignore.
Nota
If you ignore an intermediate broken reference, its children are ignored if not
already resolved.
6. To resolve the broken reference by mapping it to the selected candidate, click Update.
Nota
If you resolve an intermediate broken reference, the system tries to resolve its children
automatically.
7. (Optional) To undo a resolved or ignored reference, select the node and click Restore Original.
8. (Optional) In the Tree Display Options section, select or clear the Resolved References check
box to show or hide the resolved references.
9. To resolve another broken reference, select the reference in the tree and repeat the process.
Dica
You can click Next and Previous to navigate through the tree.
11. (Optional) On Reconcile toolbar, click Export to save the mapping to a mapping file.
12. To apply the new mappings for motion, animation, and clearance files, save the session, and
then reopen it.
2. Type the search string in the text search box. It is not case sensitive. You can use * as a wild card.
• (If the assembly is loaded from Teamcenter) To search for the candidates in the Teamcenter,
set the Use Teamcenter to find candidates, if available reconcile preference.
4. Click Find.
The search results are displayed in the candidate list.
The scope of the search is shown in the Find Scope box.
If necessary, you can click Stop to cancel the search.
5. (Optional) In addition to displaying the search results in the candidate list, you have options to
identify the candidates in the Viewing window and assembly tree. Choose one of the following
from the Show candidates in view list:
6. (Optional) If searching for name or ID does not find the required candidate, you can use an
attribute filter to search for candidates. If the attribute search finds suitable candidates, select the
candidate and update the broken reference in the Reconcile Reference Dialog dialog box.
4. In the Save As dialog box, enter a file name, and then click Save.
Nota
If you import a mapping file before you open a file with broken references, the mapping
are applied automatically. If you import a mapping file after opening a file with broken
references, save the session and reopen it to apply the mappings.
3. In the Open dialog box, select the mapping file and click Open.
• If you already opened a file with broken references, save the session and reopen it to apply
the mappings.
The mapping file is searched for matches for each broken reference. If a match is found, the
part or assembly loads without incident. If a match is not found, you can manually resolve any
remaining broken references.
Validate references
When working with files that contain references to parts or assemblies, you can validate the
references to ensure that they still function.
Exemplo
If you use session files to preserve snapshots of geometry, if the geometry changes the
references may break. Validating the session file tells you if your snapshots work properly,
without activating each snapshot.
Nota
Click Cancel if you want to stop the validation before it is finished. However, if you
cancel a validation check, your file may contain broken references. Saving a file with
broken references may result in the loss of data.
If your file does not contain broken references, a message informs you that your product structure
references are valid.
3. If your file contains broken references, resolve them before saving the file.
4. Click OK.
• Locale
• CADID string
• NGID string
For example, a mapping file created in the English locale would resemble this:
Vis Product Structure Mapping File: Version 2
C
"CHLD0000\x00fishing_reel.asm;0;0:\x00handle_assembly_1.asm;0;0:\x00\x00"
"CHLD0000\x00fishing_reel.asm;0;0:\x00yyy_handle_assembly_1.asm;0;0:\x00\x00"
"$$NGID<child>=0\x00$$NGID<chain>=\x22JT_INST_REFID_PDM\x22\x000_TOP_ASM\
x001_YYY_HANDLE_ASM\x00$$NGID<chain>=\x22JT_PROP_NAME\x22\x00CHLD0000\
x00fishing_reel.asm;0;0:\x00yyy_handle_assembly_1.asm;0;0:\x00\x00"
• CADID strings must be NULL delimited. The NULL delimiter is represented by \x00.
• ASCII values from 0 - 31 (decimal) and 176 - 255 (decimal), all non-ASCII characters, and the
character “ (ASCII value 34 (decimal)), must be converted to the following format for inclusion
in the mapping file:
\xHH, where HH is the hexadecimal ASCII value of the character or the hexadecimal value of the
current byte in the multi-byte character. Thus, if a multi-byte character has two bytes there will be
two values printed out. For example, \xAA\xBB.
Exporting 3D models
Overview of exporting 3D models
You can export 3D models in a variety of 3D formats:
• JT files and datasets
Exporting JT files
Nota
• Only visible parts and the assembly hierarchy of those parts are saved.
• Lights assigned to the root node (the "Models" node in the assembly tree) are not
exported when you save a model as a JT file. To save a light source that is assigned to
the root node, you must move it at least one level lower in the assembly tree.
• If you have directories containing hundreds or thousands of files, it may take a while for
the complete list of files to appear in the Export dialog box. You can press Ctrl-Break
(Windows) or Esc (Mac and Linux) to stop the file listing at any point.
2. Choose File→Export.
3. In the Export dialog box, browse to the location where you want to save the file, and enter
a name for the file.
Nota
You cannot use any non-ASCII character, including 8 bit accented Western European
and multi-byte characters, for a file name.
5. (Optional) In the Hierarchy list, select an alternate assembly hierarchy or inserted model.
Nota
If the 3D model does not include an alternate assembly hierarchy, then the Hierarchy
list only includes one choice, Model, which represents the original assembly hierarchy.
You can create alternate hierarchies using the Assembly tool.
6. (Optional) Click Options to change settings that affect file content and structure, and then
click OK.
7. In the Affected Files and Directories dialog box, review the list of affected files and directories,
and then click OK.
A progress bar appears as the model is saved. Upon completion, a message informs you if
the model was successfully saved.
8. Click OK.
You can set options that affect how the model is saved as a JT file.
1. Choose File→Export.
3. Click Options.
4. In the JT Export Options dialog box, edit any of the following settings:
Nota
JT versions higher than 9.7 do not support
older legacy PMI. If you select this option and
Include PMI attempt to export a model with legacy PMI,
and you choose a JT version higher than 9.7,
a warning appears about data that cannot be
Optional data saved. If you need the PMI data, you can
cancel the export and re-export using a lower
JT version.
• 0.001mm accuracy
• 0.01mm accuracy
• 0.1mm accuracy
Nota
ULP data is only supported in JT version
higher than 9.1.
Nota
• JT features introduced in a particular
release are not supported in earlier
versions of the application. However, with
later version JT files, you still may be able
to view the geometry in an earlier Viewer,
although the application will disregard
JT Version
unsupported features.
Embed images • Select the check box to embed the images in the
in JT files JT file.
5. Click OK.
• Semi-precise geometry with a measurement accuracy that is much greater than tessellated
geometry and very close to full B-Rep data. Semi-precise measurements typically achieve a
measurement accuracy of 1e-5 meters.
• High quality surface geometry with little deviation of the normal direction or curvature distribution
from the original B-Rep geometry.
Nota
ULP JT files exported from Teamcenter lifecycle visualization do not contain LODs. To
generate a ULP JT file that contains a LOD, you must use JtOptimize.
When creating JT files containing ULP data, it is important to understand the three possible ULP
compression settings that impact the size and accuracy of an exported JT file:
Nota
Semi-precise measurements that use ULP data are indicated by a tilde and an equals
sign (~=) in the measurement display label.
You can export product structure as PLM XML. You also can set options that affect how the product
structure is saved.
Nota
• 3D parts cannot be saved as PLM XML. Use the Absolute File Path or Relative File
Path PLM XML export options to reference the original locations of your JT files, or
use the JT Geometry Creation option to create new JT files.
• Materials and material assignments are saved, except when the initial JT has
assembly-level assignments not authored in Teamcenter lifecycle visualization. In that
case, those assembly-level material assignments are not saved.
• If you have directories containing hundreds or thousands of files, it may take a while for
the complete list of files to appear in the Export dialog box. You can press Ctrl-Break
(Windows) or Esc (Mac and Linux) to stop the file listing at any point.
2. In the Export dialog box, browse to the location where you want to save the file, and enter
a name for the file.
Nota
You cannot use any non-ASCII character, including 8 bit accented Western European
and multi-byte characters, for a file name.
4. (Optional) In the Hierarchy list, select an alternate assembly hierarchy or inserted model.
Nota
If the 3D model does not include an alternate assembly hierarchy, then the Hierarchy
list only includes one choice, Model, which represents the original assembly hierarchy.
You can create alternate hierarchies using the Assembly tool.
5. (Optional) Click Options to change settings that affect file content and structure.
6. Click OK.
7. In the Affected Files and Directories dialog box, review the list of affected files and directories,
and then click OK.
A progress bar appears as the model is saved. Upon completion, a message informs you if
the model was successfully saved.
8. Click OK.
Nota
• If you have unsaved clearance results, the Save Clearance Results As dialog
box appears. You must save to a .txt file to reference the results.
• If you have unsaved motion files, a Warning dialog box appears asking if you want
to save the changes to a file.
3. Click Options.
4. In the PLMXML Export dialog box, edit any of the following settings:
On this tab Use this option To do this
• Camera Orientation
• Visibility
• Selection
• Active Hierarchy
• Markup Layers
General
• Transforms
Current State of
Document • Behaviors
• Layer Filters
• Reference Sets
• PMI
• Material Assignments
• Light Assignments
• CAE
• Visual Report
• True Shading
• Exploded Views
• Coordinate System
• Cross Sections
• Constraint
• Measurements
• Volume Clipping
• Hide Obscuring
Document Description Include a description.
Visible Product Structure Save visible product structure only.
Complete Product Save all product structure contained within the
Structure model.
Include the assembly-level attributes from
Include late loaded Teamcenter even if you have not downloaded
Product attributes them for viewing. If not checked, only
Structure downloaded attributes are saved.
Absolute File Path Save references using absolute file paths.
Relative File Path Save references using relative file paths.
Export a JT file for each part reference. JT files
JT Geometry Creation created using this option are saved in the same
location as the exported PLM XML file.
Product View [a list of your snapshots] Specify which snapshots to save with your file.
5. Click OK.
The changes are saved to the registry on your local system and become the default settings.
You can export 3D models in the VRML 1.0 format. You also can set options that affect how the
model is saved.
Nota
If you have directories containing hundreds or thousands of files, it may take a while for
the complete list of files to appear in the Export dialog box. You can press Ctrl-Break
(Windows) or Esc (Mac and Linux) to stop the file listing at any point.
1. Choose File→Export.
2. In the Export dialog box, browse to the location where you want to save the file, and enter
a name for the file.
Nota
You cannot use any non-ASCII character, including 8 bit accented Western European
and multi-byte characters, for a file name.
4. (Optional) In the Hierarchy list, select an alternate assembly hierarchy or inserted model.
Nota
If the 3D model does not include an alternate assembly hierarchy, then the Hierarchy
list only includes one choice, Model, which represents the original assembly hierarchy.
You can create alternate hierarchies using the Assembly tool.
5. (Optional) Click Options to change settings that affect file content and structure.
6. Click OK.
7. In the Affected Files and Directories dialog box, review the list of affected files and directories,
and then click OK.
A progress bar appears as the model is saved. Upon completion, a message informs you if
the model was successfully saved.
8. Click OK.
You can set options that affect how the model is saved as a VRML file.
1. Choose File→Export.
3. In the Save As VRML dialog box, edit any of the following settings:
Exemplo
Use VRML Instancing If you want to save four identical
wheels, you can save the geometry
of one wheel and use instancing to
represent the others in the model.
4. Click OK.
Nota
• For the NASTRAN BULK (BLK) format, Teamcenter lifecycle visualization turns
polygons and tristrips from visible parts into triangles, and then translates them into the
CTRIA3 element type. Polyline sets or point sets are ignored.
• Different parts are assigned different PIDs (property IDs) in the exported file.
• Material properties, load cases, and boundary conditions are ignored. This means that
the exported BLK file cannot be used directly by NASTRAN for analysis purposes
without manually adding additional information.
• Teamcenter lifecycle visualization cannot load BLK files. The application can only
export them.
• If you have directories containing hundreds or thousands of files, it may take a while for
the complete list of files to appear in the Export dialog box. You can press Ctrl-Break
(Windows) or Esc (Mac and Linux) to stop the file listing at any point.
2. In the Export dialog box, browse to the location where you want to save the file, and enter
a name for the file.
Nota
You cannot use any non-ASCII character, including 8 bit accented Western European
and multi-byte characters, for a file name.
4. (Optional) In the Hierarchy list, select an alternate assembly hierarchy or inserted model.
Nota
If the 3D model does not include an alternate assembly hierarchy, then the Hierarchy
list only includes one choice, Model, which represents the original assembly hierarchy.
You can create alternate hierarchies using the Assembly tool.
6. In the Affected Files and Directories dialog box, review the list of affected files and directories,
and then click OK.
A progress bar appears as the model is saved. Upon completion, a message informs you if
the model was successfully saved.
7. Click OK.
You can export 3D models in the ROBFACE format. You also can set options that affect how the
model is saved.
Nota
• Teamcenter lifecycle visualization cannot load ASY files. The application can only
export them.
• If you have directories containing hundreds or thousands of files, it may take a while for
the complete list of files to appear in the Export dialog box. You can press Ctrl-Break
(Windows) or Esc (Mac and Linux) to stop the file listing at any point.
2. In the Export dialog box, browse to the location where you want to save the file, and enter
a name for the file.
Nota
You cannot use any non-ASCII character, including 8 bit accented Western European
and multi-byte characters, for a file name.
4. (Optional) In the Hierarchy list, select an alternate assembly hierarchy or inserted model.
Nota
If the 3D model does not include an alternate assembly hierarchy, then the Hierarchy
list only includes one choice, Model, which represents the original assembly hierarchy.
You can create alternate hierarchies using the Assembly tool.
5. (Optional) Click Options to change settings that affect file content and structure.
6. Click OK.
7. In the Affected Files and Directories dialog box, review the list of affected files and directories,
and then click OK.
A progress bar appears as the model is saved. Upon completion, a message informs you if
the model was successfully saved.
8. Click OK.
1. Choose File→Export.
3. In the Save As ROBFACE dialog box, edit any of the following settings:
4. Click OK.
You can save 3D documents as PLM XML. Functionality persisted with PLM XML includes extended
3D content such as transformations and camera orientations, 3D snapshots, and product structure.
Also included are references to motion files, clearance results files, JT files, and other PLM XML files.
You can use the Save As option to create a PLM XML file that preserves all supported content from
the active 3D Viewing window. Use the Export option to increase control over what is persisted in the
PLM XML file. You can specify what supported content to include and what supported content to
leave out of the exported file.
Use the PLM XML preferences to change options for how PLM XML files are saved.
Nota
• 3D geometry cannot be saved as PLM XML. To save parts as a supported 3D format,
you must use the Export option.
• Materials and material assignments are saved, except when the initial JT has
assembly-level assignments not authored in Teamcenter lifecycle visualization. In that
case, those assembly-level material assignments are not saved.
2. (Optional, if the PLM XML Preferences are set to appear when you save a PLM XML file) Adjust
the PLM XML Preferences, and then click OK.
3. In the Save File dialog box, browse to the location where you want to save the file, enter a
name for the file, and click Save.
The model is saved as PLM XML.
Nota
• You cannot use any non-ASCII character, including 8 bit accented Western
European and multi-byte characters, for a file name.
2. In the Export dialog box, In the File section, browse to the location where you want to export the
file, and enter a name for the file.
Nota
You cannot use any non-ASCII character, including 8 bit accented Western European
and multi-byte characters, for a file name.
Nota
If the 3D model does not include an alternate assembly hierarchy, then the Hierarchy
list only includes one choice, Model, which represents the original assembly hierarchy.
You can create alternate hierarchies using the Assembly tool.
6. Click OK.
A progress bar appears as the model is saved. Upon completion, a dialog box appears indicating
that the model was successfully saved.
2. In the PLMXML Preferences dialog box, on the Save tab, change any of the following options:
• STEP (.stp)
• DXF (.dxf)
• DWG (.dwg)
Nota
• For DWG, DXF, and IGES files, surfaces are the only 3D objects translated to the .jt
format. You can open DWG, DXF, and IGES files that contain line drawings as 2D
images.
Dica
If you have directories containing hundreds or thousands of files, it may take a while for
the complete list of files to appear in the Open File to Translate dialog box. You can
press Ctrl-Break (Windows) or Esc (Mac and Linux) to stop the file listing at any point.
2. In the Open File to Translate dialog box, browse to the file, and click Open.
3. In the Choose File to Translate to dialog box, type a name for the translated file and browse to
the location where you want to save it.
Nota
You cannot use any non-ASCII character, including 8 bit accented Western European
and multi-byte characters, for a file name.
5. Click Save.
The file is translated into a JT file.
Nota
Save All Layers
Modified markup layers are saved to their associated markup
datasets. New layers are saved to a new markup dataset.
Save Selected Layers Highlighted markup layers associated with the base document.
Save Selected Layers Highlighted markup layers as a new markup dataset associated with
As the base document.
3. In the Save dialog box, select or type the name of the markup layer file to save.
Nota
You cannot use any non-ASCII character, including 8 bit accented Western European
and multi-byte characters, for a file name.
4. Click Save.
(If you chose Save All Layers) A new Save dialog box appears for each markup that you save.
Nota
When you create or edit a 3D layer, a pen and arrow icon appears before the name of
the markup layer in the Markup Layers list until you save the layer. When you save the
layer, the icon disappears until the layer is edited again.
2. Navigate the model until the Viewing window displays the view you want to save.
2. Expand or collapse the assembly until it displays the level of detail you want to save.
4. In the Save or Save As dialog box, browse to the appropriate file path.
Dica
If you have directories containing hundreds or thousands of files, it may take a while for
the complete list of files to appear in the Save As dialog box. You can press Ctrl-Break
(Windows) or Esc (Mac and Linux) to stop the file listing at any point.
Nota
You cannot use any non-ASCII character, including 8 bit accented Western European
and multi-byte characters, for a file name.
6. Click Save.
Nota
This option is available only if the graphic is stored in Teamcenter.
Cuidado
Each graphic option of the same graphic file
must have unique usages. For example, do
not use piston.png and piston.gif both with the
VIEW option.
Nota
For S1000D graphics, select the site master
language. The S1000D standard does not require
you to associate a language with graphics, and the
S1000D graphic attribute mapping that is provided
with the Content Management installation does not
support multiple languages for graphics.
Nota
If you select neither overwrite mode, the graphic
will be saved as a new graphic if a graphic option
with the same Original Imported Name property
and graphic usage does not already exist in the
system.
• Skip existing
The graphics are not saved if they already exist in
Content Management.
• Overwrite existing
If the graphics already exist in Content Management,
they are overwritten.
If you select Overwrite existing, select one of the
following usage handling options:
Dica
To view the usages associated with an existing
graphic option, right-click the graphic option
revision, and choose View Properties.
Nota
Edit, publish, and export functions always use
the latest revision of graphic options. If you
revise a graphic, the new revision appears in
all content that it is referenced in. If you want
to change a graphic but you do not want the
graphic updated in all content, you must save
the changed graphic as a new graphic with a
different name.
o Keep
The usages of the existing graphics are retained.
o Merge
o Overwrite
The usages of the existing graphics are removed
and replaced by the usages selected in the Graphic
Options dialog box.
4. Click Next.
Dica
A resolution of 72 DPI is suitable for images to display on a monitor (e-mail and web
pages). Use a resolution of at least 300 DPI for print content.
6. Click Finish.
Nota
If your organization uses watermarks, a watermark page may appear before you can
click Finish.
7. In Content Management, search for the graphic, and then move it to the folder where you want
to store it.
8. Right-click the graphic option revision, and choose Copy For Editor→Graphic Content.
9. In the editing tool, right-click the valid position in the topic where you want to insert the graphic,
and choose Paste.
The graphic reference is inserted in the topic’s XML, using the tag information from your Graphic
Link Clipboard preference and the identifying information for the graphic file.
Nota
• If you update a graphic that is included in published content, you mush republish the
content for the update to appear.
• Edit, publish, and export functions always use the latest revision of graphic options. If
you revise a graphic, the new revision appears in all content that it is referenced in. If
you want to change a graphic but you do not want the graphic updated in all content,
you must save the changed graphic as a new graphic with a different name.
Nota
This option is available only if the graphic is stored in Teamcenter.
Dica
• If you are using the graphic in translated content and need to associate the graphic
with a different language, select the language from the Language list.
o Merge
The usages of the existing graphics are retained, and the new usages selected
for this save are added to the graphics. For example, if a graphic being saved
already exists with the VIEW and WEB usages, and the selected usages in the
Graphic Options dialog box are THUMBNAIL and ICON, the graphic is saved
with the VIEW, WEB, THUMBNAIL, and ICON usages.
o Overwrite
The usages of the existing graphics are removed and replaced by the usages
selected in the Graphic Options dialog box.
4. Click Next.
Dica
A resolution of 72 DPI is suitable for images to display on a monitor (e-mail and web
pages). Use a resolution of at least 300 DPI for print content.
6. Click Finish.
Nota
If your organization uses watermarks, a watermark page may appear before you can
click Finish.
Save 2D layers
1. In the Assembly view, select the 2D layers you want to save.
Dica
Save Selected Layers As
You can select layers by clicking
the layer in the Assembly view. To
select multiple layers, hold the Ctrl
key while you click.
Export Combined Layers Save all selected 2D layers as one 2D layer file.
Nota
You cannot use any non-ASCII character, including 8 bit accented Western European
and multi-byte characters, for a file name.
Nota
If you selected multiple 2D layers and chose the Save Selected Layers As option, you
are prompted with more than one Save As dialog box.
2. From the Export Image dialog box, choose from the following options:
Nota
o When you export a PDF
file as a PDF file, an exact
copy of the input PDF file
is exported. That is, the
original quality of the PDF is
exported.
Nota
Resolution Increasing the resolution does not
improve the quality of the output for
2D raster files; it only increases the
file size.
• Color
Choose a file type from the list.
Nota
• Exporting TIFF images:
Dica
• From the list, click one of these
options; None, PackBits, or
Deflate(ZIP).
Nota
(Windows only) For additional
watermark options, right-click,
point to Insert and choose one of
following:
• Date
Watermark
• Time
• File
Watermark
• Path and File
• UserID
• Page
Nota
If the administrator creates an
MDS file, the Watermark option is
unavailable.
Nota
Nota
• A watermark that covers the
underlying document appears
Opaque
on the printed document.
Nota
• 50% of the underlying document
appears on the printed
Transparent
document.
Nota
• By default, Background Color is
unchecked.
Background Color
• By default, white is the selected
background color.
3. Click OK.
A second Export Image dialog box appears.
4. (Optional) Specify a new file name and, if necessary, browse to a directory in which you want
to save the file.
Nota
You cannot use any non-ASCII character, including 8 bit accented Western European
and multi-byte characters, for a file name.
5. Click Save.
The 2D image is saved with the file name and extension you specified. The original image
is unchanged.
Nota
You can use any of the following features when you export (save) a 2D image:
• Save the 2D image exactly as it is displayed in the Viewing window (a zoomed in
view, for example). You can also save the entire 2D image and any markup layers
associated with it.
• Export the 2D image to other supported file format, for example export a TIFF file and
convert it to PDF.
• Create a Watermark that is placed on the 2D image. The watermark is saved on all
pages of your 2D image.
• Export document files using PDF or CGM file type options. In each instance, you can
export multiple-page documents.
Vector images are not affected by resolution settings. Notice that Resolution has been
removed from the Output section of the Export Image dialog box for vector output.
• After closing the Viewing window, click Yes when the application prompts you to save
changes.
3. In the Save As dialog box enter a name for the file in File name.
Nota
You cannot use any non-ASCII character, including 8 bit accented Western European
and multi-byte characters, for a file name.
5. Click Save.
The application displays the saved Image Capture in the Viewing window.
Nota
For best results when viewing the image with markups, zoom the image to a 1:1 scale.
7. The Save dialog box appears, prompting you to type a name for each layer file.
Nota
You cannot use any non-ASCII character, including 8 bit accented Western European
and multi-byte characters, for a file name.
2. From the Export Image View List dialog box, select from the following options:
Nota
You cannot use any non-ASCII
character, including 8 bit
accented Western European
Save to File
and multi-byte characters, for a
file name.
Nota
• When you execute the macro,
the information is saved in
a temporary directory. This
directory is then emptied when
Execute Macro
you exit the program.
• If the EAI_SAVE_PVL_MACRO
environment variable is not
defined, you cannot execute the
macro and an error message
will appear.
Code explanation
• General Notes
o Comment records begin with the "#" character.
o In the following, the term "layer" refers to both the original and markup layers to be written to
the .pvl file from the Viewing window.
o This message must be the first line in a View List file and the syntax is specific.
o The "{ background job ... }" string will identify .pvl files generated from the Export Image
View List command.
• # Sheet Open
o Each sheet will have a unique name and will identify one file.
o This command will appear for each layer that is to be written to the .pvl file from the active
view.
o The base layer will be identified first, followed by the added markup layers.
o The markup layers are saved as temporary files and are automatically deleted when the
application exits.
• # ViewSet Open
o After opening an individual sheet for each layer in the view, this command combines the
sheets into a single view.
o Each ViewSet will have a unique name (up to 40 characters) and will reference all layers
visible in the view. For Export Image View List PVL files, this will always be "ThisViewSet."
o The key word "Absolute" identifies that the numbers that follow are real numbers that identify
the following coordinate pairs:
■ x and y coordinates for the center of the viewport (uses units from the sheet)
■ x and y indicating the width and height of the viewport (uses units from the sheet)
2. Select Performance and Maintenance and then select System, or just select System.
The System Properties dialog box appears.
8. Click OK.
Nota
(Windows only) To send e-mail from the viewer through an MAPI e-mail program like
Microsoft Outlook, the viewer and e-mail program must have the same bitness. If one is
32-bit and the other is 64-bit, you get a warning message and no message is sent.
Nota
• To create .vfz collaboration files, you must have the Professional or Mockup service
level, along with an additional .vfz collaboration file license.
• You can open .vfz collaboration files in any viewer service level.
• You can edit, repackage, and re-send the data from existing collaboration files if you
have the Standard, Professional, or Mockup service level.
• (Windows only) To send e-mail from the viewer, through an MAPI e-mail program like
Microsoft Outlook, the viewer and e-mail program must have the same bitness. If one
is 32-bit and the other is 64-bit, you get a warning message and the e-mail is not sent.
to export JT files with full B-Rep data, PMI markups, and LOD information, or as Ultra-Lightweight
Precise (ULP) data.
It is important to understand the distinction between creating new .vfz collaboration files and editing
existing files. Creating entails opening, inserting, or merging 2D and 3D documents, which are
packaged as a new .vfz collaboration file and sent to collaborators; it requires the Professional or
Mockup service level, along with an additional .vfz collaboration file license. Editing consists of
repackaging the data from an original .vfz file with new content, such as markups, snapshots, groups,
and measurements; it requires the Standard, Professional, or Mockup service level.
After you open documents from your local file system or Teamcenter, you can package the data as a
new .vfz collaboration file and send it to your collaborators. Creating .vfz collaboration files requires
the Professional or Mockup service level, along with an additional .vfz collaboration file license.
The following components are included in collaboration files:
• Copies of 2D image files
• Attachments
Nota
If you are working with files in multiple Viewing windows and the collaboration
preferences are set to package all views, a snapshot is included for each Viewing
window. These snapshots persist the state of the data visible in the Viewing windows.
If you have created other snapshots, they are not included in the packaged file
because they may reference parts that are not currently visible, which would result in a
reconcile problem for the e-mail recipient. However, you can include new snapshots
when editing an existing .vfz collaboration file.
After you receive a .vfz collaboration file and review its contents in your visualization client, you can
edit the data from the file and then re-send it. Edits can consist of content such as markups, cross
sections, and groups. Because the scope of the data is limited, you also can include new snapshots
in the repackaged file. If you have the Standard, Professional, or Mockup service level, you can edit,
repackage, and re-send the data from existing collaboration files.
When you edit .vfz collaboration files, you cannot add new 2D or 3D documents to the session. This
invalidates the edits and disables the option for sending the file.
Exemplo
You receive a collaboration file, which you open in your Viewer. The file consists of
a 3D model, a 2D image, markups, and a snapshot. After creating new markups,
performing measurements, and capturing new snapshots, you choose File→Send
Mail→Collaboration File. The data from the original .vfz file is repackaged to include your
edits and is attached to a new e-mail message, which you can send back to the person
who initially sent you the file or to someone else.
Nota
Only visible parts are included in the collaboration file. Snapshots are not packaged in
new collaboration files because they may reference parts that are not currently visible,
which may result in a reconcile problem for the recipient of the file.
b. On the Packaged Collaboration File Preferences dialog box, choose one of the following
options to package the session contents of the active Viewing window only or the contents of
all open Viewing windows:
• Active View
• All Views
c. From the 3D Content list, choose one of the following options to export your geometry as JT
files that consist of Ultra-Lightweight Precise (ULP) data only or JT files with full content:
• Lightweight
• Full
e. Click OK.
3. (Optional) Add attachments, such as Microsoft Office documents, to .vfz collaboration files:
a. Choose File→Attachments.
c. In the Choose attachment file location dialog box, choose the file you want to attach to
your work session or session package, and click Open.
Dica
To view the contents an attached file, select the file in the Attachments dialog
box and click Open.
Nota
(Windows only) To send e-mail messages from the Viewer through an MAPI e-mail program
like Microsoft Outlook, the Viewer and e-mail program must have the same bitness. If one
is 32-bit and the other is 64-bit, you get a warning message and the e-mail is not sent.
3. Add content that you want included in the repackaged collaboration file, for example, 3D
markups, groups, or snapshots.
Nota
When you edit a .vfz collaboration file, you cannot add new documents to the work
session; you can only edit documents included in the original file. A .vfz collaboration
file license is required to add new documents to an existing file.
4. When you are ready to re-send the updated work session, choose File→Send
Mail→Collaboration File.
The .vfz collaboration file is repackaged and attached to a new e-mail message.
Nota
(Windows only) To send e-mail messages from the Viewer through an MAPI e-mail program
like Microsoft Outlook, the Viewer and e-mail program must have the same bitness. If one
is 32-bit and the other is 64-bit, you get a warning message and the e-mail is not sent.
2. On the Packaged Collaboration File Preferences dialog box, do any of the following:
To Do this
Include only the contents of the active Viewing
Choose Active View.
window in the .vfz file.
Include the contents of all of the open Viewing
Click All Views.
windows in the .vfz file.
From the 3D Content list, choose Lightweight.
Nota
Export geometry as Ultra-Lightweight Precise
(ULP) JT data. The Lightweight option saves
geometry as ULP data only; no PMI
markups or B-Rep data is included
in the .vfz file.
To Do this
Select the Enable password protection
check box.
Nota
Turn on password protection for .vfz files.
When you create a .vfz collaboration
file, a dialog box appears asking you
to provide a password for the file
before it is created.
Show the data that will be included in the .vfz Select the Review content before sending
file. check box.
3. Click OK.
Overview of printing
You can print your current view of a 2D image or 3D model. In addition to using standard printing
functionality, you can do the following:
• Preview before printing.
Choose this
On this tab Then do this
option
Select a printer to print the documents.
Dica
Click Properties to view and modify available
printer options.
Name
Dica
To print embedded Hewlett Packard Raster
Transfer Language images, you must select
an HPGL printer or plotter.
Default print • To use the print settings used the last time you
Print settings printed, click Last Used.
Dica
You can also choose Select None to clear
all selections, or Select All to select all
Open
documents.
Documents
Choose this
On this tab Then do this
option
Select one of the following page layouts:
• Portrait
• Landscape
Nota
If you choose Best Fit, all pages print with
the same orientation.
• 1:1 scale
• Scale
Print Scale
Dica
Use the arrows to increase or decrease
the scale percentage, or type in a
Print Layout percentage.
Nota
The Printer Language option is only available
Printer when you select Bypass Printer Driver from
Language Roll Plotter.
Choose this
On this tab Then do this
option
Language Issues
Postscript data is not
Postscript compressed, resulting in
larger data files.
HP-GL/2 None.
Prints 906/907 with
Calcomp
images.
Prints monochrome color
C4
only.
Prints monochrome color
MIL-R
only.
CGM None.
TIFF Prints color.
Do one of the following:
• Move the slider to improve the clarity or readability
of images previewed or printed.
• Print Image
Moving the slider to the right may improve the print
quality of some images.
Quality
• Preview Image
Moving the slider to the right may improve the
readability and clarity of some images.
Choose this
On this tab Then do this
option
Image Specify where you want an image placed (printed) on
Alignment the page.
Margins Set page margins before printing.
Select or clear letting the software handle how the text
is sent to the printer.
Nota
This setting is useful when printing Vector
images that contain font style and font
Treat 2D Vector characteristics that are not supported by the
as Raster local computer.
If the Vector image includes a font style that
is not supported by the local computer, the
software tries to select a close approximation
of the font. This may result in text output that
is slightly off.
Exemplo
A starting point for copyright text is set to one
MDS File inch from the top left corner of the page.
Settings
The text will always be at this location
regardless of the size of the page.
Choose this
On this tab Then do this
option
Don't print blank
Specify printing fewer pages in long flow charts.
pages
Specify printing a chart as a stand alone entity.
Linked Flow
Specify printing multiple-linked flow charts side-by-side.
Chart
To make the Header or Footer section available, select
one or both of them.
Font
Click Select Font, and then choose a font name, style,
size, and color.
Type the header text in the space provided.
• (Windows only) For additional header options,
right-click, point to Insert, and then choose one of
following:
o Date
Header o Time
o File
o Page
Type the footer text in the space provided.
• To make the Header or Footer section available,
select one or both of them.
o Time
o File
Choose this
On this tab Then do this
option
o UserID
o Page
Select Watermark to make these options available.
Choose Select Font to select a font name, style, size,
Font and color.
Select Auto Scale Font Size to automatically fit the text
to the available space.
Type the watermark text in the space provided.
• (Windows only) For additional watermark options,
right-click, point to Insert, and then choose one of
following:
o Date
o Time
o File
Watermark
o Path and File
Watermark
o UserID
o Page
Nota
If the administrator creates an MDS file, the
Watermark option is unavailable.
Nota
The button to the
left of Watermark Options include text that is displayed
text location diagonally, from lower left to upper right or
upper left to lower right, or horizontally in the
center of the page.
Choose this
On this tab Then do this
option
Nota
An opaque watermark can cover text and
graphics.
Nota
Transparent
A transparent watermark lightly covers text
and graphics. About 50% of the covered data
displays on the printed document.
Nota
Background
• By default, Background Color is
Color
unchecked.
4. Click Print.
Nota
• If your administrator created a Watermark stamp or Header and Footer, the Watermark
and the Header and Footer tabs are unavailable.
• The FlowCharter tab only appears if you are printing a Flowcharter file.
3. In the Printer Setup dialog box, type the following information in the designated areas:
• HPGL
Type • CalComp907
• CalComp951
• TIFF
• Raster
2. In the Manage Printers dialog box, select a printer from the list.
2. In the Manage Printers dialog box, select a printer from the list.
The printer is removed.
2. In the Manage Printers dialog box, select a printer from the list.
5. (If you chose Custom) In Dimensions, enter the length by height, and then select inches
(in), centimeters (cm), or millimeters (mm).
• File, type the file name that receives the printed output.
7. Click OK.
2. In the Manage Printers dialog box, select a printer from the list.
5. Click OK.
The page is removed from the list.
3. In the Print dialog box, select an HPGL printer or plotter and click OK.
The file is sent to your printer.
Nota
• RTL is a subset of Hewlett Packard PCL (Print Command Language) and RTL is used
to embed true raster images (bitmaps) into plotter files.
• You can print HP RTL images in RGB color (color represented by 8-bits each of red,
green and blue), in indexed color (color represented by an 8-bit index that is stored
in a table of RGB colors), and in monochrome (color represented by a single bit –
black and white).
• Scaled images and 8-bit color output are not supported at this time. Also, unsupported
commands are skipped, and the application continues to process files. The application
supports only those HP RTL commands and compression methods necessary for
output.
• Use Export Image to export and save the file. Later, you can open the file in the
Viewing window.
Nota
You use the MetaDataStamp Template to control the formatting styles used in text
and watermark stamps. The default MDS_default_styles_template.mds template file
is located in the TC_DATA directory in the RAC; it is imported to the database as a
dataset called MDS_default_styles_template. For information on importing a custom
MDS_default_styles_template.mds template file, see the MetaDataStamp_template
preference.
Cuidado
When you create and save the default.mds file, end-user watermark preferences become
unavailable.
The watermark MDS command operates differently from other MDS stamp commands.
• Only one \Watermark command is supported in an MDS file. However, you can enter several
other basic MDS commands that create useful watermark stamps.
• The beginning position of the watermark text always defaults to the center of the page. However,
you can modify the beginning position of the watermark by using the \Pos option.
Nota
• Type each MDS command on a separate line.
• Basic text and watermarks stamps support the following replacement strings:
o %Date – date only
Exemplo
\BackgroundColor(Red)
\BackgroundColor(255,0,0)
Nota
• Control the background color value in one of these ways:
o Enter a standard RGB value.
■ yellow
■ cornsilk
■ green
\BackgroundColor
(Color or RGB value)
■ cyan
■ sky blue
■ blue
■ midnight blue
■ purple
■ magenta
■ red
■ orange
■ salmon
■ gray80
■ slate
■ gray
■ black
\Char(size) Exemplo
\Char(12)
\Color(color) Exemplo
\Color(Red)
\Font(name) Exemplo
\Font(Courier)
\FooterLeft
Exemplo
\FooterCenter
\FooterRight \FooterCenter
Confidential
\Halftone(1.0 or 0.5)
Exemplo
\Halftone(0.5)
\HeaderLeft
Exemplo
\HeaderCenter
\HeaderRight \HeaderCenter
Confidential
\Pos(x,y) Set the beginning cursor position. The default cursor position is (36,36).
Exemplo
\Rotate(angle)
\Rotate(45)
\Rotate(-45)
Nota
• The Orientation parameter supports the following values
o (LL2UR) – lower left to upper right
o (HORIZ) – horizontal
\Watermark
If you do not specify a value, the default, HORIZ, is used.
Exemplo
\Watermark(HORIZ,AUTO)
Sample Text
2. Name the MDS file, default.mds, and save it to the etc folder within your installation directory.
All printed images will now contain the watermark defined by the MDS file.
\BackgroundColor(None)
Line of sample text.
\BackgroundColor(Purple)
\Char(36)
\Watermark(HORIZ)
6.0 Demo
Set the beginning cursor position for stamps with MDS files
If you create additional detailed stamps for your files by using MDS stamps, use the MDS command
/Pos(x,y) to specify the beginning cursor position of the stamp. The numeric values, x and y are
measured in point-size, where one point is equal to 1/72 of an inch.
The default starting position for all MDS text entries is the upper-left corner of the page, or a position
equal to /Pos(36,36). This means the cursor begins at a point that is 1/2 inch from the top of the
page and 1/2 inch from the left edge of the page.
You can use these additional cursor position options, as needed:
Use this
To do this
option
Position the stamp outside the stamped image and into the margin. This position
= indicator is only available for HPGL-based stamping and cannot be used with the !
position indicator. This may only be used for the vertical position.
Measure the position in point sizes (1/72 of an inch or approximately 0.35
! millimeters). Without the symbol (!), the current operating coordinate system
determines the units of measure.
Begin the cursor at the lower right-hand corner of the image. Without the symbol (–),
–
the position is measured from the upper left-hand corner.
Nota
Allow enough space for the character size in the y direction to avoid truncating (cropping)
the stamp.
Exemplo
This example shows how to position the cursor 3 inches up from the bottom and 2 inches
from the right-hand edge of the page.
\pos(!-144,!-216)
2. Use positive rotation values to rotate text counter-clockwise. The zero angle (or start) is the point
of intersection on the right side of a horizontal line crossing through the center of rotation. The
center of rotation is the midpoint of the height and the midpoint of the width before rotation.
Exemplo
Dica
• The angle value must be an integer.
• To prevent truncated or cropped text, be mindful of your text starting point, font size,
and rotation angle.
Cuidado
When you create and save the export.mds file, end-user watermark preferences become
unavailable.
Nota
• Type each MDS command on a separate line.
• The beginning position of the watermark text always defaults to the center of the page.
However, you can modify the beginning position of the watermark by using the \Pos
option.
Exemplo
\BackgroundColor(Red)
\BackgroundColor(255,0,0)
Nota
• Control the background color value in one of these
ways:
o Enter a standard RGB value.
■ green
■ cyan
■ sky blue
■ blue
■ midnight blue
■ purple
■ magenta
■ red
■ orange
■ salmon
■ gray80
■ slate
■ gray
■ black
\Char(size) Exemplo
\Char(12)
\Color(color) Exemplo
\Color(Red)
\Font(name) Exemplo
\Font(Courier)
\Halftone(1.0 or 0.5)
Exemplo
\Halftone(0.5)
Exemplo
\Rotate(angle)
\Rotate(45)
\Rotate(-45)
Nota
• The Orientation parameter supports the following
values
o (LL2UR) – lower left to upper right
o (HORIZ) – horizontal
\Watermark
If you do not specify a value, the default, HORIZ,
is used.
Exemplo
\Watermark(HORIZ,AUTO)
Sample Text
3. Name the file, export.mds, and save it to the etc folder within your installation directory.
All images saved using Export Image are saved with the uniform watermark stamp.
Exemplo
This example shows the text of a watermark stamp that is embedded on all images saved
by Export Image.
\Color(0,255,0)
\Font(Arial)
\Char(18)
\BackgroundColor(white)
\Watermark(UL2LR)
%File: Restricted Document %Time
Nota
• Days and times in the future are positive; to set them to the past, use negative numbers.
• The date option limit is 5000 days in the future or in the past. The time option limit is
1500 minutes in the future or in the past.
Nota
The following steps are for Windows systems. For Mac and Linux, right-click is not
supported. You type specific tokens (for example, %Date) into the appropriate field.
1. Choose File→Print.
2. In the Print dialog box, click the Header and Footer tab.
3. Select the Header check box, the Footer check box, or both and then select the location of the
text (left, center, or right).
5. Add the necessary text and date information for the header or footer.
In this example, the text used is Expires on %Date(30).
The image is printed with the header text in the top left corner of the page. A specific date is
printed 30 days from the date of printing the file.
5. (Optional) Create the text and then insert the variables or insert the variables and create text
around them.
Nota
Type each MDS command on a separate line.
For complete details about MDS stamp files, see Creating text and watermark stamps using an
MDS file.
• Modify the default settings temporarily by changing their values. For example, change the print
orientation from portrait (the default setting) to landscape for this specific print job.
Nota
The print default settings appear the next time you request a print job, unless you
select Last Used Print dialog box. Use Last Used to repeat a temporary change in
default setting options. For example, if you change print orientation from portrait to
landscape the Print Default setting generates a portrait print job and the Last Used
settings prints landscape.
Exemplo
C:\Program Files\Siemens\Teamcenter<release_version>\Visualization\etc
2. Use a text editor to open, review, and change the values associated with this XML file. Once
the changes are made, save the modified Initialization.xml.
Dica
For each section that you configure, be sure to configure the OverWrite preference to
“Yes” if the current value is set to “No”.
Here is sample section of an Initialization.xml that shows default print options and their values.
<Section_Printing>
<!-- OverwriteDefaults: yes to set defaults each time app start, no to set defaul
if value not set yes is recommended -->
<OverwriteDefaults state="no" />
<PrintOptions>
<NumCopies value="1"/>
<!-- Collate: "yes" "no" -->
<Collate state="no"/>
<!-- FullPathNameFlag: "yes" "no" -->
<FullPathNameFlag state="no"/>
<!-- PrintToFile: "yes" "no" -->
<PrintToFile state="no"/>
</PrintOptions>
<PrintLayout>
<!-- Orientation: 0=Portrait 1=Landscape 2=Best Fit -->
<Orientation value="0"/>
<!-- PrintScale: 0=Fit to Page 1=1:1 Scale 2=Scale -->
<PrintScale value="0"/>
<!-- ScalePercentage: 1-100 -->
<ScalePercentage value="100"/>
<!-- RollPaperAutoSize: "yes" "no" -->
<RollPaperAutoSize state="no"/>
<!-- BypassPrinterDriver: "yes" "no" -->
<BypassPrinterDriver state="no"/>
<!-- PrinterLanguage: 0=Post Script 1=HPGL 2=TIFF 3=C4 4=MILR -->
<PrinterLanguage value="0"/>
<!-- PrintQuality: 0.0 - 100.0 -->
<PrintQuality value="0.0"/>
<!-- PreviewQuality: 0.0 - 100.0 -->
<PreviewQuality value="0.0"/>
<!-- AutoCalcPrintQuality: "yes" "no" -->
<AutoCalcPrintQuality state="yes"/>
<!-- PrintAsMonocolor: "yes" "no" -->
<PrintAsMonocolor state="no"/>
<!-- PrintFullView: "yes" "no" -->
<PrintFullView state="no"/>
</PrintLayout>
<Advanced>
<!-- ImageAlignment: 0 to 8 -->
<ImageAlignment value="4"/>
<!-- UseWYSIWYG: "yes" "no" -->
<UseWYSIWYG state="yes"/>
<LeftMargin value="0"/>
<RightMargin value="0"/>
<TopMargin value="0"/>
<BottomMargin value="0"/>
<!-- MarginUnits: 0=Inches 1=Millimeters -->
<MarginUnits value="0"/>
<!-- TreatVectorAsRaster: "yes" "no" -->
<TreatVectorAsRaster state="no"/>
<!-- RelativeLineFonts: "yes" "no" -->
<RelativeLineFonts state="no"/>
<!-- MDSIsGeoCentric: no=Page Centric yes=Geometry Centric -->
<MDSIsGeoCentric state="no"/>
</Advanced>
</Section_Printing>
If settings from a previous version are detected, the Migrate Preferences dialog box appears when
you first start the product.
Nota
If you want to stop the dialog box from appearing each time you start the application,
select the Do Not Ask Again check box. If you choose both No and Do Not Ask
Again, migrating your preference settings to your current version is no longer possible.
2. Click OK.
You may need to set higher security standards when you work with government entities and other
similar organizations. The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) developed Federal
Information Processing Standards (FIPS) for use government-wide. These standards relate to such
security features as the size of a public key, the strength of a cipher, and the way information must
be sent between computers.
If your organization uses FIPS security standards, you must enable FIPS mode for the heightened
security to take effect in the application.
1. (Windows only) Use Microsoft guidelines to configure your computer to run in FIPS mode.
-or-
Set the TCCRYPTO_FORCE_FIPS_MODE environment variable to True.
Nota
If the variable is set to true, the menu option Use FIPS will be unavailable. You will
be unable to turn FIPS on or off because your computer will always be configured
FIPS mode.
Nota
(Windows only) By default, if your computer is in FIPS mode, Internet Explorer is
automatically set to run in FIPS mode.
3. In the Document Units section, from the Document Units list, select a unit of measurement.
Nota
• The default unit of length for product structure data sent to the Lifecycle Viewer or
the stand-alone application viewer is meters.
• The Document Units preference is not applicable for structure that is inserted
or merged into an existing document.
• The Document Units preference has no effect on static structure that is opened
in the Lifecycle Viewer or the stand-alone application viewer. The document unit
of length for static data is specified using the PLMXML units setting in PLMXML
Preferences.
• Replay Recipe
When both configured and static product Click Load static structure (structure at time
structure are available, open the structure of session save).
according to its state at the time the session
was saved.
When both configured and static product Click Ask at load time.
structure are available, choose how to load the
structure when you attempt to open it.
5. In the Partitions section, select the Show empty partitions check box if, when viewing partition
hierarchies in the assembly tree, you want to show partitions that have no design element
members. When this option is not selected, empty partitions do not appear.
Nota
The Teamcenter site preference TC_Generate_Markup_Name determines whether
dataset names are hard-coded or generated. This controls the markup name only in
Teamcenter. In standalone Lifecycle Visualization, the generated markup name is always
used.
• Cancel load
• Show warnings
When you have opened the documents in In the Same User / Different Application
another application section, choose from the following options
• Load in read only mode
• Cancel load
• Show warnings
When you have already opened the documents In the Same User / Same Application section,
in the viewer choose from the following options
• Load in read only mode
• Cancel load
• Show warnings
Nota
This preference is applicable for assemblies only. It has no effect on individual JT datasets.
3. In the Teamcenter Attributes tab, select the attributes that you want to display.
Dica
To select multiple adjacent attributes, click the first attribute, press Shift, and then
click the last attribute. To select multiple nonadjacent attributes, hold Ctrl as you click
each item.
4. Click Add.
The selected attributes move to the Displayed Attributes section.
Nota
• You can also set the attributes to display within Teamcenter. Choose
Edit→Options→Index, and then search for Interop_Vis_Attributes.
• To display attributes that are longer than a single line, your system administrator must
have grouped them into a single, multiline attribute.
To Do this
Enter form data on 2D Select the Show attributes form on save check box.
snapshots
Nota
You can enter data for any custom form fields. Revision and
Page information is entered automatically.
To Do this
Add or update 3D a. Select the Add or Update 3D Geometry Asset check box.
geometry asset for
product views b. (Optional) Select the Draw Outline check box to generate an
outline of the 3D geometry asset.
Nota
If you do not see the Add or Update 3D Geometry
Asset check box, contact your administrator.
Nota
If you do not see the Image Capture check box, contact
your administrator.
Rename the product a. Select the Show Snapshot Name Dialog check box to display the
view before saving it New Teamcenter Product View Dataset dialog box.
Nota
• Use 3D Product View preferences to modify how Teamcenter product views are
processed.
o When the Teamcenter protection scope of the preferences is higher than your
permission scope. For example, if your administrator set the preference protection
scope to SITE, and your protection scope is set to USER, the 3D Product View
options are unavailable.
• If you have permissions, when you change a product view preference in Lifecycle
Viewer you also change the corresponding Teamcenter preference on the server.
Nota
Issue Report is the default issue
type. Your organization may also
allow you to choose from additional
issue types.
Specify the issue relation to use for snapshots In the Issue Relation for Snapshots section,
choose one of the following:
• Snapshot Before Fix
• Session File
Enter options for visual issue creation each Select the Ask at the time the Issue is
time an issue is created created check box.
To Do this
Specify to save configured structure only Select Save only configured structure.
Specify to save both configured and static Select Save configured and static
representations of the current structure representations of the current structure.
Europe
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