Changing the style of an object
You apply different styles to objects in order
to change their functions. For example, if you change a line in the Cutting
style to the Creasing style, a creasing knife will be applied onto the
line, not a cutting one.
Changing the style of an object
Changing the style of an object
with a child style
To change
the style of an object
- Select an object or several objects whose
style you want to change.
- To apply a style,
Styles toolbar click one of the four style
buttons.

The selected style is applied to the selected
object or objects.
To change the style of an object
with a child style
- Select an object or several objects whose
style you want to change.
- To apply a style, on the Styles toolbar click the style whose child style
you want to apply to the object and hold the click for one second.
A dropdown list appears with the child styles
of the selected style.

The list appears after you've held the click
a second longer.
- Click the new style for the object.
NOTE: This style-changing technique can
be used also to draw an object in a particular child style: choose the
child style that you need, and then start drawing the object in the graphical
area. After the object has been drawn, the chosen child style and its
parent appear automatically in the tabular area no matter if they were
there before.
Notes
- You can change the style of an object also
by using the procedure for changing its properties. For details, see
Editing individual properties of geometric objects.
- On the Style toolbar, each button color depends
on the color that is set for it. Learn how to modify the properties
of global and project
styles.
- The Styles toolbar is unavailable when you
are:
- In a transformation
mode (except the Breaking
objects mode).
- Inserting or selecting dimensions, print
parts, layout 1ups, parametric components and images.
- Selecting a group of objects none of which
allows a change of style — for example, dimensions and parts.
If in a multiple selection only some of the objects allow changes
in style — for example, two geometric objects and two dimensions
— the new style is applied only to the geometric objects, not
to the dimensions.
- Defining
an offset. (Offsets always inherit the style of the object
from which they are derived.)
- Using the rectangle-enhancement
mode.