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This task shows you how to create dimensions that will
drive associated geometry. You can create the following types of driving
dimensions:
- length
- distance (and distance offset in the case of two concentric circles)
- angle
- radius
- diameter.
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Go to Tools> Options> Mechanical Design> Drafting>
Dimension and select Activate analysis display mode. Then,
click the Types and colors button. The Types and colors dialog
box is displayed. Make sure the Dimensions driving 2D geometry
check box is selected, and identify the color that will be assigned to
driving dimensions (you can change it if you want).

Create a line. Click the Dimensions
icon from the Dimensioning toolbar and
create a length dimension on this line.

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Double-click the dimension. The Dimension value dialog box is displayed.
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Make sure the Drive geometry check box is
selected. This dimension will now drive the geometry.
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Modify the dimension value, entering 40 millimeter as the
new length.
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Click OK to validate and exit the dialog box.
The geometry is updated according to the new driving dimension value.
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Click elsewhere in the drawing to deselect the dimension.
You can see that the driving dimension is assigned the colors defined in
the Types and colors dialog box.
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Limitations
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You cannot create driving dimensions between the following types of
elements (in this case, the Drive geometry option is deactivated
when double-clicking the dimension):
- Between an interactive element and any point of a generated circle
(that is to say, the circle center or a point on the circle).
- Between an interactive circle and a generated circle (not center).

- Between two fixed elements, that is to say:
- generated elements
- axis lines
- center lines
- 2D components
- interactive elements that are fixed by constraints or driving
dimensions.
- If created using Force Dimension on element
, a
distance offset dimension (i.e. a distance dimension created between two concentric circles) cannot drive geometry.
To bypass this problem, force an horizontal or vertical dimension.
See the example below:
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- Once the Drive geometry check box is selected, you can
access a contextual menu and customize the values properties according to
your needs. For more information on the available options, refer to CATIA
Knowledgeware Infrastructure - Tips and Techniques - Summary, available
from the Using Knowledgeware Capabilities section in the
Infrastructure User's Guide.
- When a driving dimension is created between two parallel lines, then
their parallelism is constrained. Therefore, if a geometrical parallelism
constraint was previously applied to them, this constraint is destroyed.
This avoids an over-constrained situation.
- Dimensions created along a reference direction cannot be driving
dimensions, that is they cannot drive the geometry.
- A minimum distance dimension cannot drive the geometry.
- In the Knowledge Base:
When creating driving dimensions, why is the Drive Geometry option
unavailable for some geometrical elements?
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