CAD system - ANSWER Design and technical documentation technology that
replaces manual drafting with an automated process.
Interface - ANSWER interface is a device or a system that unrelated entities
use to interact.
Workspace - ANSWER A workspace is a collection of user interface elements,
such as ribbon tabs and panels, toolbars, palettes, and menu bars, which are
assembled and organized in such a way that you can work within a project, in a
personalized, task-oriented drawing environment.
Sketch / Sketching - ANSWER The creation of base 2D profiles for the
development of solid models, surfaces, and T-spline forms. The 2D geometry
that provides the backbone for the creation of the 3D part.
Data Panel - ANSWER Region that shows different views of data that are in
operation and its listings for input and editing
Timeline - ANSWER the bar at the bottom of your screen that captures your
design history.
Canvas - ANSWER It's the virtual paper you draw on in SketchBook.
Whenever you open up SketchBook a default canvas is created for you.
, Sketch Dimension - ANSWER SketchBook has a beautiful interface that
maximizes the drawing space of every device.
Sketch Palette - ANSWER The Sketch Palette appears when a sketch is open.
The palette includes the most frequently used options for sketches, as well as
sketch constraints.
Line Tool - ANSWER Create a set of connected line segments. Each segment
of the line is an independent line object that may be edited individually.
Constraints - ANSWER Constraints are inferred when sketching new or
modifying existing geometry. In this inference process, some constraints
become available to the geometry while the shape and orientation vary.
Top-down design methodology - ANSWER Instructional System Design,
Design Thinking, Agile Design, System Thinking, and X Problem
Bodies and components - ANSWER Components are sets of assemblies, while
a body is one of the elements of a component. Every component has one or
more bodies, as well as their own origin planes, sketches, construction
geometry, joints, and other elements.
Joints - ANSWER joint allows a part to move translationally (back and forth)
along the X, Y, or Z axis or to rotate about one of these axes.
As-built joints - ANSWER Places parts relative to each other and defines
relative motion. Parts retain their current position. Select parts to mate. Specify
joint type and joint origin position.
replaces manual drafting with an automated process.
Interface - ANSWER interface is a device or a system that unrelated entities
use to interact.
Workspace - ANSWER A workspace is a collection of user interface elements,
such as ribbon tabs and panels, toolbars, palettes, and menu bars, which are
assembled and organized in such a way that you can work within a project, in a
personalized, task-oriented drawing environment.
Sketch / Sketching - ANSWER The creation of base 2D profiles for the
development of solid models, surfaces, and T-spline forms. The 2D geometry
that provides the backbone for the creation of the 3D part.
Data Panel - ANSWER Region that shows different views of data that are in
operation and its listings for input and editing
Timeline - ANSWER the bar at the bottom of your screen that captures your
design history.
Canvas - ANSWER It's the virtual paper you draw on in SketchBook.
Whenever you open up SketchBook a default canvas is created for you.
, Sketch Dimension - ANSWER SketchBook has a beautiful interface that
maximizes the drawing space of every device.
Sketch Palette - ANSWER The Sketch Palette appears when a sketch is open.
The palette includes the most frequently used options for sketches, as well as
sketch constraints.
Line Tool - ANSWER Create a set of connected line segments. Each segment
of the line is an independent line object that may be edited individually.
Constraints - ANSWER Constraints are inferred when sketching new or
modifying existing geometry. In this inference process, some constraints
become available to the geometry while the shape and orientation vary.
Top-down design methodology - ANSWER Instructional System Design,
Design Thinking, Agile Design, System Thinking, and X Problem
Bodies and components - ANSWER Components are sets of assemblies, while
a body is one of the elements of a component. Every component has one or
more bodies, as well as their own origin planes, sketches, construction
geometry, joints, and other elements.
Joints - ANSWER joint allows a part to move translationally (back and forth)
along the X, Y, or Z axis or to rotate about one of these axes.
As-built joints - ANSWER Places parts relative to each other and defines
relative motion. Parts retain their current position. Select parts to mate. Specify
joint type and joint origin position.