For a large assembly, I want to make a composition to take away while keeping the structure of the folders. The problem is that the execution time is particularly long.
I decided to make one Pack n Go per subset (I have about ten of them, it's manageable), except that each Pack n Go takes an hour to be generated. Especially since it's 30 minutes to load the Pack n go interface + 30 minutes to generate the export, so the solution of launching everything before leaving doesn't save me much...
As I would like not to spend a day watching an hourglass turn, I wanted to know if it was possible to plan an export while keeping the folder structure (especially with a tool like Integration or Project Manager).
Hello c_vuillaume, Indeed it's long depending on the size of the file, if it's possible for you to launch it in the evening before leaving? Then there's " ProjectManager ", but it's only for moving the whole thing or your stuff to another directory. I'm looking at tomorrow to see if it's possible otherwise. Good night. @+. AR.
Unfortunately, the problem is that the time to load the pack n go interface already takes a lot of time, it certainly saves me half the time but I'll have to wait for the second part of the process tomorrow morning
Tested with ProjectManager, I haven't used it for a few years (change of method), but it worked very well to copy even large projects quite quickly, and at the time faster than the ancestor of packandgo. So to be tested. However, for programming at a certain time, TaskPlanner (Mycadtools) does not include the ProjectManager utility.
@A_R you can also copy it on the same disk to another location, with or without renaming the elements, and keeping the tree structure or not (or even filtering some parts (library for example)... The tool is very powerful, even if a little more complex at first, but remains very understandable.
Thank you all for your answers, to recap all this:
The tool that seems the most appropriate is Project Manager (I made an attempt yesterday, but without success, to keep the folder structure, to dig a little deeper);
I found that removing (completely erasing) the envelopes of my subsets greatly improved the execution time of the pack n go. These were envelopes of large subassemblies in the deleted state, but that Pack n Go was going to find.
Yes indeed it is better to completely delete the assemblies in the deleted state because PackAndGo will look for the links before ignoring them. For ProjectManager, the option for the tree should be as follows: On the other hand, the new version of Projectmanager confuses me a little, I've lost my bearings! For the method it always remains the same principle, Document selection, possible filter of parts not to be copied, export and rename option. For the help of the utility here is the link, it's pretty well documented: