Quick Start
Table Of Contents
- GettingStarted_withCover.pdf
- Getting Started Inventor Fusion TP2
- Contents
- Autodesk Inventor Fusion TP2
- What is new in TP2?
- Working with Inventor Fusion User Interface
- The Ribbon
- Glyphs and Manipulators
- Marking Menu
- Selection commands
- Enhanced tooltip
- Browser and Copy/Paste
- Function Key Behavior
- Triad
- Measure
- Menu and Command Access
- Other commands in the Application Window
- Create 3D Models
- Create a Single Body
- Create Multiple Bodies
- Modify a Body
- Sketch
- Starting a Sketch
- The Sketch Plane
- The Sketch Grid
- Line/Arc Segment Creation
- Spline Creation
- Circle Creation
- Circular Arc Creation
- Rectangle Creation
- Ellipse Creation
- Polygon Creation
- Project Geometry
- Trim/Extend
- Sketch Fillet
- Sketch Inferencing
- Sketch Constraints
- Stopping a Sketch
- Sketch Profiles
- Editing a Sketch Entity
- Locking Sketch Geometry
- Features
- Find Features
- Dimensions and Body Constraints
- Error Handling
- Work Geometry
- Working with Multiple Components
- Dimensions as Annotations
- User Tags
- Import Data
- Export Data
- Materials and Model Appearance
- Modeling Paradigms
- System Requirements
- Index
Locking Sketch Geometry
A Sketch entity can be locked by selecting it, right-clicking and picking the
Lock/Unlock Geometry Option. It can be unlocked by selecting the menu
item again.
When an entity is locked, it is drawn in dark green. User-created edges are
unlocked by default. Projected Geometry on page 157 is locked by default.
Locking a curve does not automatically lock its endpoints or vertices. When
a curve is locked, it cannot be moved. In the previous image, the line is locked;
however its endpoints are not. This reduces the edit operations you can perform
on the curve and even on curves or points connected to it. In the previous
example, you can extend the line in either direction, but you cannot move
the position of the line or change its direction.
176 | Chapter 1 Autodesk Inventor Fusion TP2