2011

Table Of Contents
Moves the selected display option up one spot in the
Current Display Order list.
Move Up
Moves the selected display option down one spot in
the Current Display Order list.
Move Down
Overview of project-related files
There are some optional project-related files that AutoCAD Electrical supports.
These files provide various functions such as keeping a project consistent,
helping update custom title blocks across a project, or providing custom
settings for various tools such as the PLC I/O module insertion tool.
Optional AutoCAD Electrical project-related files include:
Database for choosing catalog part number assignments.
It is also referenced when automatically generating various
bill of materials reports.
Catalog lookup
It is an Access-format MDB file that is named <pro-
ject>_cat.mdb (project-specific version of a catalog lookup
file) or DEFAULT_CAT.MDB (default catalog lookup file). If
the project-specific .mdb file is used, it needs to be in the
same folder where the <project>.wdp file is located. If a
project-specific version is not found, then the DE-
FAULT_CAT.MDB is searched for in the same folder as the
active project file, and then in the paths defined in subdir-
ectory search sequence "C" below.
Lists various standard component description selections,
accessible by clicking Defaults on the Insert/Edit Compon-
ent and Panel Layout - Component Insert/Edit dialog boxes.
Description defaults
This file can be a family-specific ASCII text file with a .wdd
extension (for example, "PB.WDD" for family PB push
buttons). If the family-specific file is not found, then it
searches for a file with the same path and name as the
active project with a .wdd extension (<project>.wdd). If
neither a family-specific or project-specific file is found, it
defaults to searching for a general description file
WD_DESC.WDD in the various AutoCAD Electrical search
paths and AutoCAD support paths (subdirectory search
sequence A below). If none are found, it prompts for
browsing to a .wdd description file.
174 | Chapter 3 Project Management