Browsers supply a great deal of view-related functionality by listing the parts of a model in a tabular and/or tree-based
format, and providing controls inside the table that allow you to alter the display of model parts.
FE geometry is topology on top of mesh, meaning CAD and mesh exist as a single entity. The purpose of FE geometry
is to add vertices, edges, surfaces, and solids on FE models which have no CAD geometry.
Tools and workflows that are dedicated to rapidly creating new parts for specific use cases, or amending existing
parts. The current capabilities are focused on stiffening parts.
Open animation files, measure various distances and angles between entities, and use the Results Browser to view the model structure and find, display, and edit entities.
Create and edit user-defined data type expressions, derived load cases, and systems. You can also plot a forming limit
diagram, generate streamlines, track entities during animation, and create and import/export sets of entities.
Query entities, create or edit free body diagrams, construct multiple curves and plots from a single result file, and
create and plot stress linearization.
The management of Free Body Diagrams (FBD) sections created in
HyperView can be handled by means of their storage and retrieval
through an ASCII file statement, allowing you to manipulate the definition of such items
directly in the input/output process.
Once you have defined FBD sections in HyperView, you can invoke the Export dialog (shown below), where you
can select which sections are to be exported.
From the Aerospace menu, select FBD > Export FBD Sections.
The export formats supported are:
XML
CSV
Once the section file has been created, it can be shared and re-used on models
having the same topology or it can be modified to change the original section
definition.
The Import option works accordingly supporting the same input file
definition (.csv, .xml).