Rather than save your custom code to a word document, you can save it in "My Snippets" by highlighting, right click and select "Save as custom snippet". It should be available in any new file as I believe it saves to the iLogic file. You could also save the current file to your template. And then you said Vault....I worked in a stand alone environment and never used Vault.
Good Video! I have problem to Drive iPart LENGTH param by an iAssembly table's Custom Parameter Column what way it is possible? Would You be able to make tip for that?
I'm brand new to iLogic. You kind of lost me right off the bat when you didn't explain the character you added in front of the Nothing statement at the 6:47 mark in the video. The video is too blurry to see and I can hear you clicking buttons but you don't explain what you are doing. So the rest of the video is a wash. You pressed some ALT buttons but I can't see your fingers. I know this video is older but I'd really like to continue learning from it.
Rather than save your custom code to a word document, you can save it in "My Snippets" by highlighting, right click and select "Save as custom snippet". It should be available in any new file as I believe it saves to the iLogic file. You could also save the current file to your template. And then you said Vault....I worked in a stand alone environment and never used Vault.
Good Video! I have problem to Drive iPart LENGTH param by an iAssembly table's Custom Parameter Column what way it is possible? Would You be able to make tip for that?
Is it possible to add any no of custom properties using ilogic ? if yes then how ?
I'm brand new to iLogic. You kind of lost me right off the bat when you didn't explain the character you added in front of the Nothing statement at the 6:47 mark in the video. The video is too blurry to see and I can hear you clicking buttons but you don't explain what you are doing. So the rest of the video is a wash. You pressed some ALT buttons but I can't see your fingers. I know this video is older but I'd really like to continue learning from it.
If you haven't figured it out already, He put the "=" sign in front of the word Nothing.