Welll sort of. Ill try to explain.
Prior to 2014 release of SW there was no Conic tool in sketcher. This is one of the most essential tools for aircraft design. To develop an inlet for a jet for example (jet engine manufactures in a non mil-spec standard must grantee 100,000 hours before overhaul) the jet engine manufacturer may want a specific conic or RHO (Greek letter P) at one point and to blend out to another value later in the sweep. Currently as I know it only Catia NX and Creo can sweep tools along a trajectory with a graph or equation. specifically to Creo TRAJPAR & GRAPH Features To layout a wing a trajpar type of equation is often necessary however many aircraft designers opt for lofting this type of geometry DXF import to DXF import. With this approach SW is acceptable. To optimize that form arrow space engineers and the Aerodynamics people they work for require driving that geometry w/ a graph or equation. Alternate to that it's really guesses and estimates. That maybe good enough for model airplanes.
Until 2007 SW was really easy to beat up on. I often hear designers and engineers in my Creo classes state "Bart, you don't understand, I have been an expert in Solidworks since 1998" That software was so bad back then and even subsequent years I was not really able to respond to a comment like that and I hear it all the time. I had trouble taking Solidworks seariously previouos to 2007 and 7 years later they finally decided to add the conic tool? WOW.
ie. The first NC programmed boat prop was done w/ Pro/ENGINEER using a trajpar graph in 1992 by a titanium mill house in Washington State.