aliensquale
Mechanical
- Oct 20, 2008
- 39
Okay so I have a few questions.. first off I have my Solidworks file directory structure like the following..
d:\Customer Name\Machine Name\Application Name\partfile.sldprt
d:\Customer Name\Machine Name\Application Name\partfile.slddrw
d:\Customer Name\Machine Name\Application Name\partfile.sldasm
Now in my assemblies there could be references to files in the same folder, in folders 2 levels up, in folders on completely different partitions E: or F:
1.) So my question is this.. how do I move the actual .sldasm file to an entirely new directory or partition name, etc. and still maintain all of the references? Meaning the references would need to be updated as I move the assembly?
2.) Doing just the reverse, if I move my .sldprt part files which are being used in many different assemblies all over the place, then how do I move the .sldprt file and have it automatically update it's new location reference in every .sldasm assembly that it is used in?
3.) I often have to make copies of existing .sldprt files and put them into a new directory for custom changes to these files. Then I go into Solidworks Explorer to rename the file.. when it puts up the rename box it will automatically search for where else that .sldprt file is used in.. any assemblies, drawings, etc. What I noticed however is that it only searches up about 2 levels of directories to find the references. Instead of searching say the entire D: of where ALL of my solidworks files live. So in theory when I do the rename of my .sldprt files, I am not very confident that it is finding ALL places where the .sldprt file is being used. It may only find the places it's being used in say 1 or 2 directory levels UP from where the file currently lives. This is making things very tough for me to properly maintain all of my files and references.
And no I do NOT use 'configurations' or 'PDM works' in Solidworks and I do NOT want to use them either.. that's just a business decision we made. We are only a small 2-person Solidworks engineering team so I don't think we need to use PDM works for checking out and locking files, etc.
Thanks for your help!
d:\Customer Name\Machine Name\Application Name\partfile.sldprt
d:\Customer Name\Machine Name\Application Name\partfile.slddrw
d:\Customer Name\Machine Name\Application Name\partfile.sldasm
Now in my assemblies there could be references to files in the same folder, in folders 2 levels up, in folders on completely different partitions E: or F:
1.) So my question is this.. how do I move the actual .sldasm file to an entirely new directory or partition name, etc. and still maintain all of the references? Meaning the references would need to be updated as I move the assembly?
2.) Doing just the reverse, if I move my .sldprt part files which are being used in many different assemblies all over the place, then how do I move the .sldprt file and have it automatically update it's new location reference in every .sldasm assembly that it is used in?
3.) I often have to make copies of existing .sldprt files and put them into a new directory for custom changes to these files. Then I go into Solidworks Explorer to rename the file.. when it puts up the rename box it will automatically search for where else that .sldprt file is used in.. any assemblies, drawings, etc. What I noticed however is that it only searches up about 2 levels of directories to find the references. Instead of searching say the entire D: of where ALL of my solidworks files live. So in theory when I do the rename of my .sldprt files, I am not very confident that it is finding ALL places where the .sldprt file is being used. It may only find the places it's being used in say 1 or 2 directory levels UP from where the file currently lives. This is making things very tough for me to properly maintain all of my files and references.
And no I do NOT use 'configurations' or 'PDM works' in Solidworks and I do NOT want to use them either.. that's just a business decision we made. We are only a small 2-person Solidworks engineering team so I don't think we need to use PDM works for checking out and locking files, etc.
Thanks for your help!