

In the example below, I have one Custom View that changes the blade pitch and another that sets it back to zero.
#SOLIDWORKS COMPOSER UPDATE#
You could use this Custom View to update the actor positions in another “normal” view while maintaining all the existing properties of that view. Whenever you select a Custom View, only the selected properties will change, no others. See Views 8, 9 and 10, these are your Custom Views. You’ll now have a view, or several views, in the View Pane that will have a diagonal line though it with some darker shading on the bottom half. Select the actors moved in Step 1 and click the Create button.Move the actors to the desired location.For example, if I only want to capture the location of a group of actors, this is the tool to use. The View Workshop gives the user complete control of capturing only the property(s) they need based on several different settings. What do you do when you don’t want or need to capture everything in the Viewport? The answer is the Custom, or Intelligent View, accessed through the Views Workshop. Actor position, color, visibility, render mode, camera position, and the list continues. These “Normal” Views capture all properties of nearly everything in the Viewport. Creating Custom Views in SOLIDWORKS ComposerĬreating Views is core functionality of successfully using SOLIDWORKS Composer.
