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08-03-2016
02:41 PM
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I've only ever use that command to group things in the timeline and that has usually worked.
Honestly I am not sure what I would expect to happen when selecting components in the viewport. What did you expect to happen ?
Hi @Anonymous,
In order to use the Create Group, you must Right Click the selected components on the Viewport and choose Create Group 🙂
I hope the following screencast will help you.
Ben Korez
Fusion 360 NewbiesPlus
Fusion 360 Hardware Benchmark
| YouTube
I admit that this is a very misleading context menu item. As the other responders indicate, Create Group is for creating a timeline group. It really should not be shown for browser component selections... However, why this happens is because when you select components in the browser, Fusion also cross-selects the features in the timeline:
Fusion does this so that some operations that can be applied to either a component object or a component feature (timeline) can both be invoked. In this case, it is just misleading, since you do have to select the timeline feature in the browser for a timeline group.
BTW, the feature that I suspect you really wanted here (browser folders) is something that we are starting to work on now. Coming soon!
Jeff
I thought it will make a "layer group" in a fast way
and make it into
what is to write expression / name for a layer / groupe with components inside ?
Ben Korez
Fusion 360 NewbiesPlus
Fusion 360 Hardware Benchmark
| YouTube
Hat would be an assembly.
@TrippyLighting brings up a good question: What are you trying to achieve here? Is it just to help organize your browser, or do you really want to create a sub-assembly that includes these components? Here is the Idea Station suggestion for browser folders: we-seriously-need-folders-in-the-browser. This is the project that is starting development now. It will let you create "folders" or "groups" in the browser of similar items (bodies, or components). But, that organization only affects the browser. It will not affect the behavior of the design at all. A sub-assembly, though, has a larger meaning. Moving a sub-assembly component will move the entire component tree. A component has its own origin, and can own sketches, work geometry, other components. Browser folders will have none of those capabilities.
You can already, today, create a new component, and drag existing components into that as child components to create a sub-assembly (with some restrictions).
Jeff