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Table Of Contents
446 | Chapter 17 Combining Parts
In the following illustration, the appearance of the part is the same, whether
or not you nest the toolbodies, but the part displayed in the Desktop Browser
on the left is easier to manage and has a less cumbersome display than the
one in the Browser on the right.
To edit CAM_1, on the left, you need to expose only one toolbody. Nested
toolbody parts, like those in the example on the right, usually have more com-
plex constraint systems and require multiple part updates after modification.
Working in Single Part Mode
If you are creating combined parts, you can work in Single Part mode. In a
single part file, you can only have one part definition, but you can work with
more than one part. If you create or externally reference more than one part,
the additional parts become unconsumed toolbodies that you can use to
combine with the first part created in the drawing.
In the Browser above, TOOLBODY1 and TOOLBODY3 are unconsumed.
TOOLBODY2 is consumed, since it has been combined with TOOLBODY1.