Working with UniFormat® Elements in Assemblies View (New Workspace)
Use the available references to work on your project's elements in Assemblies view. In the new workspace, this view displays UniFormat® elements, such as assemblies and families, and provides an assembly-driven approach as you build out your project specifications.
To manage project elements, you can use the Elements panel in the new workspace and the available options on the action bar. The following elements in UniFormat are available:
| Option | Description |
|---|---|
| Assemblies | Add assemblies to your project to document design decisions typically determined by leads from different disciplines. At the assembly grouping, you may develop performance requirements and set Level of Specification (LOS) prioritization. Subassemblies provide organization for the family and product type components to offer design clarity for a given assembly or system. |
| Families | Use family elements to manage family-level properties and section content in your project. |
| Product Types | Add
product types to define your project's product requirements and
product type properties.
A product type is a shared element in Assemblies view/UniFormat and Divisions view/MasterFormat. For more information, see Working with Product Types (New Workspace). |
Design Automation
Specpoint's design automation makes changes to a project's added elements based on the changes that you make to related elements. For example, when you add a family to a project, Specpoint adds the family's parent assemblies to the project (if not already in the project). This ensures that you do not unintentionally create unparented project elements. In addition, this makes it easier for you to add and remove functional elements while maintaining your project's adherence to the content structure of UniFormat.
For more information, see Design Automation for Project Elements.
Permissions
- The status of an assembly, family, or product type relative to the active project
- Your inclusion in project team
- Your user permission
In addition, the following permissions apply:
| Permission | Select/View | Add | Remove | Modify |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Administrator | ||||
| Author | ||||
| Contributor | Contributors have limited modification privileges. |
- Related Topics:
- Filter Project Elements by Category (New Workspace)
In the Assemblies view of the new workspace, filter the project elements in the Elements panel based on building category. This enables you to view related elements that you want to work on for your project. - Select an Assembly (New Workspace)
Select an assembly element in the Elements panel to load its performance requirements onto the editor of the new workspace for viewing, adding, and editing. - Add an Assembly (New Workspace)
As an administrator or author, add an assembly element to manage the contents and performance requirements of your project specifications. - Remove an Assembly (New Workspace)
As an administrator or author, remove an assembly element from an active project to remove its specified performance requirements as well as its added child assemblies, families, and product types. - Select a Family (New Workspace)
Select a family element in the Elements panel to load its properties onto the editor of the new workspace for viewing and modification. - Add a Family (New Workspace)
As an administrator or author, add a family element to a project to add required content and family-level properties to your project specifications. - Switch Between Family Versions in Assemblies View (New Workspace)
As an administrator or author, switch between multiple versions of a family to select the firm-level baseline content that fits your project requirements. - Remove a Family (New Workspace)
As an administrator or author, remove a family element from an active project to remove its contents and properties as well as its added child product types. - Add Multiple Project Elements in Assemblies View (New Workspace)
As an administrator or author, use the quick add feature to add multiple project elements, such as families and product types, and set up the general content outline of your project specifications.