In drawings, styles are filtered by the active standard.The style library cannot be edited directly. Editing styles always takes place inside of a document. If a style is in both a document and a library, and the two do not have the same values, the version in the document is used. The document version of a style always overrides.It ensures that the document has required style information if a library becomes unavailable, or if a document is accessed from a project with a different style library or a project without a style library.Ĭonsiderations that influence what styles (or version of a style) are available: Any style used inside of a document is automatically copied (cached) to that document. In drawings, only styles that are locally cached, or are part of the active standard, are displayed and available for selection.ĭay-to-day interactions between a document and a style library are transparent. In parts, sheet metal parts, assemblies, and presentations, all styles from the active library, as well as styles cached in the local document, are shown in the style drop-drop list or wherever a style is chosen. When a style library is used in a project, the style definitions are copied from the style library when a new document is created. Templates now specify which styles are to be used by default when a new document is created. With style libraries, the role of templates in style management changes depending on the Use Style Library setting of the project. Templates in Style Management: Prior to Autodesk Inventor 9, templates were the primary source of styles.The style library provides a means of insuring all users have access to the most current style information. The style library is designed to assist in the management of styles between multiple documents and multiple users, as well as provide some capacity benefits for large assemblies.
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Style Libraries in Style Management: Style libraries are the central storage location of styles for projects set to use the library.All style creation, editing, and management between a document and a style library is done in the context of an Autodesk Inventor document. Documents are the main point of interaction and management. Documents in Style Management: Documents, and the objects inside of a document, are the consumer of styles.If the substyle does exist, the destination’s version of the substyle is used. If the substyle does not exist in the destination container, it is copied along with the parent style. When a style is copied from one container to another, Autodesk Inventor ensures that any substyle required by the parent style is present in the destination container. A Name/Value match between the substyles is not necessary for the owning style to have an exact Name/Value match. When Autodesk Inventor checks if a style in one container (a document or a style library) is an exact Name/Value match to a style in another container, it verifies that each style is referencing a substyle of the same name. It knows nothing about the values of the properties contained in the substyle. Leader Style: used to format Hole Notes and Leader Notes.Ī style only knows the name of its substyle.Tolerance Text Style (optional): used to format the tolerances units.Primary Text Style: used to format the primary units in a dimension.When a style is referenced by another style, it is regarded as a substyle.įor example, dimension styles have three substyles: One style can reference another style that contains needed information. Autodesk Inventor takes advantage of this encapsulation to reuse one type of property set as a subset of another. Styles encapsulate and reuse sets of properties.
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The concept of a Name/Value match is used by Autodesk Inventor to perform automated tasks. If a style in a document has a name match to a style in a library, and the values of these two styles are equal (every attribute is the same value), it is considered an exact Name/Value match. When Autodesk Inventor compares two styles of the same name, it checks all of the properties in each style to see if they are equal. For example, inside a single drawing, there can only be one dimension style named "Default (ANSI)".However, there can be a dimension style named "Default (ANSI)", and a text style name "Default (ANSI)" in the same drawing, because they are two different style types. No two styles of the same type can have the same name in the same container.
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All management interactions between documents, styles, and Style Libraries use these two mechanisms to ensure that the end object using a style has all required information.Īutodesk Inventor uses the style name as the unique style identifier. There are two general mechanisms of Autodesk Inventor styles management: Style Name/Value and Substyles.