Hi,
I have a relativly basic ipt file in 2013 that I would like to open up in 2012 on another machine. I'm wondering if there's anyway I can open it up and edit it? It's kind of crucial and I assumed I'd be able to since the part used nothing besides the rudimentary tools that have been in inventor since the beginning...
Right now, I'm getting a "Database schema...which is newer than this version".
Thanks!
Solved! Go to Solution.
Solved by JDMather. Go to Solution.
Solved by JDMather. Go to Solution.
I so want to mark this as a solution...
Sam M.
Inventor and Showcase monkey
Please mark this response as "Accept as Solution" if it answers your question...
If you have found any post to be helpful, even if it's not a direct solution, then please provide that author kudos - spread that love 😄
One possible solution!!!!
Telling the truth is not whinning. We are trying to help others to see that inventor is unstable so they do not have to go thru the same negative ordeals that we are facing.
WHY can't you face the truth that inventor is unstable?
Why do you care anyway if we have negative things to say about inventor? How can this be of any concern of yours unless you being paid to promote autodesk products?
Edited by
Discussion_Admin
I tried as you suggested to un-select "loop select", and it does nothing now. It does not allow you to offset to a large or smaller entity, it only highlights it in red.
This is about the 20th time I receive bogus info from this forum.
THIS SOFTWARE WORKS DIFFERENT FROM COMPUTER TO COMPUTER and on my computer from month to month.
Stick to the truth and you can retain your soul. Making up lies to get by is not the way of excelling in life.
I will pray for you today in hopes that you can better handle the truth in your future.
Have a nice day. It's fast to do this in SOLIDWORKS.
Edited by
Discussion_Admin
@Anonymous wrote:I tried as you suggested to un-select "loop select", and it does nothing now. It does not allow you to offset to a large or smaller entity, it only highlights it in red.
This is about the 20th time I receive bogus info from this forum.
THIS SOFTWARE WORKS DIFFERENT FROM COMPUTER TO COMPUTER and on my computer from month to month.
IT IS AS UNSTABLKE AS YOUR POST.
Stick to the truth and you can retain your soul. Making up lies to get by is not the way of excelling in life.
I will pray for you today in hopes that you can better handle the truth in your future.
Have a nice day. It's fast to do this in SOLIDWORKS.
First off ... I'm a ginger, so I don't have a soul.
Second, after you select the curve segments that you want to offset - which, yes, highlights them in red - you need to right-click and select continue.
Rusty
Hmmm... it is unusual if I experience a program crash, while working on an assembly containing over 45,000 parts.
Is that what you consider unstable?
I'd like to see what monstrosity you are working on to cause all of you stability issues.
I'm not even running what I would consider a high-end computer either.
I routinely work on assemblies of 40-300 parts and it makes no difference whether I use Dual Core at Work or i7 at home, it crashes crashes and crashes, whereas I use SolidWorks and it does a lot more with a lot more ease and of course it does NOT crash. AutoDesk needs to stick withAutoCAD, or at least start with AutoCAD as a base and completely build Inventor on the platform with the same workability object snaps and the OFFSET command with the same versatility as in AutoCAD and in SolidWorks. I've worked on assemblies in SolidWorks of thousands of parts and still did not crash.
Edited by
Discussion_Admin
Bottom line - do you need your job and what software does your job use?
I have to admit that if I picked up Solidworks tormorrow I'd be scratching my head and no doubt frustrated about "why doesn't it work like Inventor" but I think I'd spend my time trying to learn it instead of wasting that time bitching on the SW forum about how their software doesn't work how I expect... Who do you think goes further in life, someone able to adapt and overcome or someone who digs in their heels expecting the world to change around them?
The problem is tho... If you were to eventually realize it's only beneficial to be competant in multiple software packages, and know the pros and cons of each, then how much time and help do you expect from people here when you come asking serious questions, given the attitude and behaviour thus far?
As for stability - I honestly rarely have a problem, like once a month, if that. Like the issues with "it's Inventor fault it doesn't work as I'm used to" I can only presume the problem lies between keyboard and monitor and the system has been setup and looked after poorly.
So... I go back to my 1st question... do you need your job and what software do they require you to use? If they use Inventor and you need the job then man up princess! Or is it a case that they were advertising for Inventor users and you claimed you'd used Solidworks "but it's all similar" and now in the deep end and struggling?!? If you are only able to use Solidworks, as it seems to be suggesting by your rants, then cut your losses and get a job with Solidworks...
Something else I'd think about - how long do you think a company will keep a new employee who's busy cursing software and blaming it for a lack of productivity, constantly pointing fingers and claiming something else was better, instead of showing initiative and a desire to further themselves and overcome the obsticles???
Sam M.
Inventor and Showcase monkey
Please mark this response as "Accept as Solution" if it answers your question...
If you have found any post to be helpful, even if it's not a direct solution, then please provide that author kudos - spread that love 😄
you can read a lot about people by the way they come across on a forum; I honestly get the impression that people like JD Mather and the late Dennis Jeffrey would bend over backwards to help out their fellow man. Sooo... you have to ponder how others might be like in real life...
I have to admit, if I was the employer I would be questioning why their previous Inventor user(s) weren't whinging, constantly finger-pointing and justifying their lack of productivity on the software in the way you can only assume a certain someone probably is (given their behavious here). Would you want such a "team player" working for you? If it's a recent job and people are still within probationary periods I'd be looking at the re-recruitment option before re-training...
Sam M.
Inventor and Showcase monkey
Please mark this response as "Accept as Solution" if it answers your question...
If you have found any post to be helpful, even if it's not a direct solution, then please provide that author kudos - spread that love 😄
Can someone explain how to open and Inventor 2014 drawing in Inventor 2012? I am trying to share files with my co-worker. I have 2014 he has 2012.
Autodesk has lost lots of money with AutoCAD being able to be saved backward compatible. That let you send files to customers that didn't have the latest versions, and you could still do business with each other. Even the dxf files were version based, but you could save to any previous version.
Edited by
Discussion_Admin
Can't find what you're looking for? Ask the community or share your knowledge.