1oldcaduser said:
No I do not have plenty of time on my hands. The reason for my comment was that I would worry that if the new view was not identical to the old view the dimensions would not be correct.
Yes, that's correct. But you don't have to worry about it, because there is no associativity. I believe that point may have been overlooked by all reading my response. YOU MUST isolate VIEW GENERATED geometry before you are EVEN ABLE to cut and paste the dimensions. And to put it another way, the pasted dimensions are dumb and useless until you DO re-route them.
1oldcaduser said:
I get the impression from your response that what you would do is recreate the same view. If that is the case then yes copy and paste would be good. Although would you have to reroute all dimensions after transferring??
It's true - you DO have to re-route them. But I can't tell you strongly enough - unless you actually try it, it may remain silly in concept to you.
Imagine this:
identical dimensions on 2 drawings, only changes that you can't see, or minor changes. The whole view must be dimensioned on both drawings.
Solution: Dimension 1 view, and then make a copy of it. Isolate the copied view. Select all dimensions, and Copy them to the clipboard. Paste them into the new view. Double click on the "re-route" dimensions icon, (to make it a "running" command) and go to town. Remember, the copy and paste will also retain the standard in which the dimensions were formatted, so you don't always have to select the text type, size, or decimal precision! None of these are high-level tasks.
Try the experiment. Use a drawing view that has no less than, let's say, 30 dimensions, with a mixture of tolerance and text attached to them. Then, come back to the forum, and post your results.
I know what my results are, and I've been doing this for quite some time, now...
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