Intended Audience: ©UGS C Orpor Ation, All Rights Reserve D 13
Intended Audience: ©UGS C Orpor Ation, All Rights Reserve D 13
Intended Audience
This course is suited for designers, engineers, manufacturing engineers,
application programmers, NC programmers, CAD/CA M managers, and
system managers who have a need for understanding and using NXsoftware.
Course Objectives
After successfully completing this course, the student should be able to:
• Demonstrate knowledge of CAD/CAM theory.
Prerequisites
There are no prerequisites for this class.
Mouse Buttons
The mouse will be used throughout this course to make selections. Examples
of different mouse devices are shown. The mouse buttons are referred to as
the first, second, and third mouse buttons, starting from left to right. On
mouses with mouse wheels, the wheel acts as mouse button 2 when it is
pressed. On two-button mouses, the buttons represent 1 and 3. Both buttons
pushed together equals mouse button 2.
The following abbreviations are used for the mouse buttons in this course.
• MB1 — Mouse Button 1
Class Standards
The following standards will be used in this cours e. Standardization allows
you to work with and predict the organization of parts created by others. All
work should be performed in accordance with these standards.
1 — Part Number
2 — Configuration
3 — Revision
4 — Extension
Seed Parts
Seed parts are an effective tool for establishing customer defaults or any
settings that are part-dependent (saved with the part). This may include
non-geometric data such as:
• Preferences
• Layer categories
• Part attributes
Two seed parts are available for use in this course, seedpart_in for inch parts
and seedpart_mm for metric parts. These parts incorporate the standards
described above.
Colors
NX identifies colors using numbers with ID’s that range from 1 to 216.
Definitions of Terms
Explicit Modeling
Explicit modeling is modeling that is not parametric. Objects are created
relative to model space, not each other. Changes to one or more objects do not
necessarily affect other objects or the finished model. Examples of explicit
modeling include crea ting a line between two existing points or creating an
arc through three existing points. If one of the existing points were moved,
the line/arc would not change.
Parametric Modeling
Constraint-based Modeling
Hybrid Modeling
Hybrid modeling refers to the selectively combined use of the three types
of modeling described above. Hybrid modelers allow designers to use
parametric modeling where needed without requiring that the entire model be
constrained before proceedin g. Because of this, designers have more flexibility
in modeling techniques. The NXhybrid modeler supports traditional explicit
geometric modeling along with constraint-based sketching and parametric
feature modeling. All tools are integrated so they can be used in combination.