Many SOLIDWORKS users don’t use Display States. So showing their name clutters up the user interface.
Luckily, you can hide the display state names in the feature tree / FeatureManager.
But the method has changed over the years, so I thought I’d share what I just found.
The steps are pretty straightforward in these versions:
According to the documentation, this method works in SOLIDWORKS 2017 to SOLIDWORKS 2021.
SOLIDWORKS made a strange change in SOLIDWORKS 2022. Maybe they thought the Tree Display menu got too long?
So from now on, not all items in the Tree Display are toggles. One of them opens another settings window! That’s not intuitive at all.
Which opens this window:
I’m pretty happy with the design of this window, even though I needed DuckDuckGo to learn about its existence. The window shows the structure (Primary, Secondary, Tertiary) of a component name in an assembly and it shows a preview with your selected options, which is always helpful.
Here is the official documentation on this window.
If you look carefully, there are three dots in name of the menu item we clicked last:
These are there to show you that clicking it opens a window. The three ellipses are actually mentioned in the Microsoft Design Basics, which I already learned and forgot once before. They have been there for decades.
Even if you don’t use Display States right now, you better start using them. Because your assemblies (and your drawings) will get faster.
The use cases for configurations vs Display States:
So if you are not changing geometry, you should not create a configuration!
In assemblies, each part and subassembly is called a component. With Display States, you can control:
To learn how to make your SOLIDWORKS models faster, check out my ebook Secrets to SOLIDWORKS performance.
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