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Thank you for listening to my rant.
There is a difference between the proposed "Geometry Lock" and the use or the roolback bar.
As you explained, the rollback bar rebuilds the model "Before/Above" the rollback bar, and not after.
The proposed "Geometry Lock" would work opposite of the rollback bar in that all of the geometry "Before/Above" the lock would be "Locked Down" and not rebuilt, and the features after the lock would rebuild as normal.
Lenny
If you add the comments listed above, they will probably understand your intent. But it might be a good idea to create a new request from scratch and make reference to a "Geometry Lock" in the title. This will ensure that your request gets recorded properly.
Thanks
As for locks, I'd like to see the ability to lock configurations. Or at least a better tool for managing them. The new Modify Configus tool in 2008 is a step in the right direction.
There are a number of events that trigger a full rebuild in SolidWorks. One such event is deleting a feature half ways up the feature tree. Depending on a user's sytle of working, this might be a common occurance. Another event is switching between configurations.
Regarding configurations, I would see the "Geometry Lock" to be a big help in that area as well. As an illustration, you could place the lock at the end of a group of common features (used in all configurations). Switching configurations would still perform a full rebuild, but only on those features after the lock.
Lloyd
Configurations seem to be the weakest link on this issue. Changes to the model prompt the configurations to rebuild fully when activating. Sounds like the programmers took the easy way out by just flagging the config as dirty on any change and then do a full rebuild to cover it. It sounds like SolidWorks should just extend the current functionality of rebuilding from the last changed feature to configurations.
This lock thing just doesn't sound necessary to me or could be more transparent behind the scenes.
I am more curious, and maybe I don't completely understand the problem.
AL
If it's handled like suppression states, maybe you could make changes, but have to unlock the affected parts/assemblies in order to rebuild.
This functionality could be an actual feature, or maybe, it would be a behind-the-scenes part of SolidWorks. In either case, the more people who submit this request, the more chance that SolidWorks will invest resources to address the specific issue of rebuild time.
If you really want to save time across the board get SolidWorks to make use of multiple processors.
I have seen bugs where every new feature added or change would prompt a rebuild from ealier in the tree. Since this model had over 500 features it took a while to rebuild. After investigating the model, I found the feature responsible and fixed the problem. The rebuild went away when adding new features.
Other things that may cause rebuilds could be circular references and equations using reference dimensions.
As for multi processors, I believe there have been some benchmarks done that show Solidworks is using multi processors when rebuild. I think certain model techniques may better utilize multi processors.