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The document contains: a specification tree to the left of the application window specific toolbars to the right of the application window a number of contextual commands available in the specification tree and in the geometry. Note that these commands can also be accessed from the menu bar.
The File Selection dialog box appears. 3. Select Sub_Product1.CATProduct from the sample directory and click Open. A new component is added to the specification tree. The assembly now includes four components: three parts and a sub-assembly.
To know the different document types you can insert in a CATProduct document, refer to Product Structure documentation. However, to know how to
The application detects it once selected. The axis is now highlighted in the geometry.
3. Select one of the two inner faces of CRIC_BRANCH_1 to select the associated axis.
Now, you are going to set a contact constraint between CRIC_SCREW and a circular face of CRIC_BRANCH_1. Note: If the modification is not done automatically, you should select the Edit > Update command. 4. Click the Contact in Catia icon: 5. Select Face publication in the specification tree.
6. Select the red circular face in the direction opposite to the published face.
As the contact constraint is created, the turquoise cylinder is located exactly on the red face.
The created constraints are automatically updated because the automatic update mode is activated. As the color defining valid constraints is green, our constraints are green. The application allows you to customize constraint colors as explained in Customizing Constraint Appearance.
3. Repeat the operation as many times as you wish. The assembly reacts correctly. CRIC_FRAME does not move because it is fixed. The other three components can move. 4. Release the left mouse button before releasing the Shift key. 5. Drag the compass away from the selected object and drop it.
Editing a Parameter
This task shows you how to edit the diameter of the pocket belonging to CRIC_BRANCH_3. You can see how this editing affects the part you created in the previous task. 1. Double-click CRIC_BRANCH_3 to access the Part Design workbench. 2. Select Pocket.2 and use the Pocket.2 object > Edit Parameters contextual command to display the associated parameters.
3. Double-click D11 in the geometry area to display the Constraint Edition dialog box. 4. Enter 20 as the new diameter value and click OK to generate the new pocket.
5. Update Product1 by double-clicking on Product1 in the specification tree. The pocket is modified accordingly. The coincidence previously set between the two parts is maintained. This result is made possible thanks to the option Keep link with selected Object you set at the very beginning of the scenario.
2. Click the Broken tab to see the list of broken constraints. We have only one broken constraint, a contact constraint. 3. Click on the name of the constraint. The constraint is highlighted in the specification tree. 4. Click on OK to close the dialog box.
3. Select the Do not prompt in future checkbox" and click the Close button.
4. Select the second face to be constrained, that is the blue circular face in the direction opposite to the red face.
Green arrows appear on the selected faces: They appear only when the orientation of the selected elements is taken into account in the coincident constraint and indicate how the selected elements is designed during the assembly update. The arrow on the first selected element is the reference arrow and its orientation cannot be modified. Double-clicking of any of arrows changes the orientation of the arrow on the second selected element. See also constraint orientation in the Constraint Properties dialog box.
The constraint type icon: The status is represented by a traffic lights icon: verified. impossible. not updated. broken. Name: the constraint name, here Concidence.8 Supporting Elements: the type of geometrical elements involved in the constraint, their related components, and their connection status are displayed. Orientation: appear only when the orientation of the selected elements are taken into account in the coincident constraint: Undefined: (the application computes the best solution) Same: geometrical element orientations are the same. Opposite: geometrical element orientations are opposite. 5. Click OK to create the coincidence constraint.
The application chooses which component is to be moved to adopt its new position. As the assembly is not iso-constrained, any component can be moved. In other words, you cannot control which components can be moved. Green graphic symbols are displayed in the geometry area to indicate that this constraint has been defined. The constraint is added to the specification tree too. Graphic symbols used for constraints can be customized. For more information, refer to Customizing Constraint Appearance.
3. Select the second face to be constrained, that is the blue face in the direction opposite to the yellow face.
Green arrows appear on the selected faces: They appear only when the orientation of the selected elements is taken into account in the offset constraint and indicate how the selected elements are designed during the assembly update. The arrow on the first selected element is the reference arrow and its orientation cannot be modified. Double-click the any arrows changes the orientation of the arrow on the second selected element. See also constraint orientation in the Constraint Properties dialog box.
The Constraint Properties dialog box displays the constraints properties: The constraint type icon: The status is represented by a traffic lights icon: verified. impossible. not updated.
broken. Name: the constraint name, here Offset.6 Measure: this mode makes the offset constraint as measure, in other words, the offset constraint is defined by the component locations, otherwise the offset constraint constrains the component locations. Using the Measure mode, the offset value is displayed between brackets indicating this mode and measured from the component locations. When the offset constraint supporting elements are two nonparallel planes the offset value cannot be measured, the constraint is invalid, any value is displayed and two pound signs are displayed between the brackets (##). Supporting Elements: the type of geometrical elements involved in the constraint, their related components, and their connection status are displayed. Orientation: appear only when the orientation of the selected elements are taken into account in the coincident constraint: Undefined (the application computes the best solution) Same: geometrical element orientations are the same. Opposite: geometrical element orientations are opposite. Offset: the offset value. 4. Enter 38mm in the Offset field. Affecting a value to an offset constraint, means that the constraint drives the distance between the components.
5. Click OK to create the offset constraint. 6. Update the assembly if needed. The offset constraint is displayed with two arrows and its offset value. This
Graphic symbols used for constraints can be customized. For more information, refer to Constraint Creation.
1. Click the Angle Constraint icon: 2. Select the face to be constrained, that is the blue face as shown.
3. Select the second face to be constrained, that is the red face in the same direction of the blue face.
The Constraint Properties dialog box is displayed with the properties of the selected constraint and the list of available constraints: Perpendicularity Parallelism (you then need to define the orientation of the faces. You can choose between Undefined, Same, Opposite options) Angle Planar angle (an axis is to be selected. This axis must belong to both planes) Note that when changing a Same orientation into an Opposite orientation or vice-versa, the application may sometimes positions the parts in an unexpected way especially if your system is under-constrained.
4. Keep the Angle option. 5. Enter 40 deg in the Angle field and keep Sector 1. A Sector combo box appears only when you select two geometries for which the orientation can be defined (this rule excludes line or edge). Four angle sectors are available: Direct Angle Angle + 180 deg 180 deg - Angle 360 deg - Angle 6. Click OK to create the angle constraint. As the angle constraint is created, the red component is moved so as to adopt its new position. A green arrow is displayed in the geometry area to indicate that this constraint has been defined. The angle value is displayed too. This constraint is added to the specification tree too.
Graphic symbols used for constraints can be customized. For more information, refer to Customizing Constraint Appearance.
2. Right-click the Coincidence.3 constraint and select the Activate command from the contextual menu.
Product 1 is the assembly to be exploded. The Depth parameter lets you choose between a total (All levels) or partial (First level) exploded view.
The usefulness of this operation lies in the ability of viewing all components separately. Note that you can move products within the exploded view using the 3D compass.
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Click OK to validate the operation and then click Yes at the prompt or click Cancel to restore the original view. Well, you have done all the tasks of the Getting Started section. Why not consult the rest of the documentation?
Drawing Guide
This task shows you how to define the drawing sheet that will be used for creating the views described in the next tasks. 1. Select File > New..., or click New The New dialog box is displayed. 2. Select Drawing from the List of Types, and click OK. The New Drawing dialog box is displayed. 3. Select the ISO standard, and the A0 ISO format. in the Standard toolbar.
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We will use the ISO standard for the purpose of this tutorial, as well as all along the guide. You can add an unlimited number of customized standards using Standard files that you will create and/or, if needed, modify. Once created, this standard will appear in the New Drawing dialog box. For more details on standards and particularly generative view styles, see the Standards Administration section in this guide. For more details on standard, standard parameters and styles, see the Standards Administration section in the Interactive Drafting User's Guide. Remember that any user-defined standard is based on one of the four international standards (ANSI, ISO, ASME or JIS) as far as basic parameters are concerned.
5. Click OK. 6. In the Generative Drafting workbench, a grid is set by default. For the purpose of this tutorial, you will not use the grid. To hide it, de-activate Grid Tools toolbar (bottom right). The drawing sheet appears as shown here: in the
From now on, you will work on this sheet. You can now either learn how to create part drawings or assembly drawings. Note that you can define a new, additional sheet at any time.
Opening a Part
This task will show you how to open the 3D part from which you will create views in the Generative Drafting workbench. Note that you may create views from both 3D parts and assemblies. Refer to the Assembly Drawing section of this tutorial for information on how to use assemblies. 1. Select File > Open..., or click Open in the Standard toolbar.
Systemes Bxxdoc English online cfysm samples Drafting folder (where xx in Bxxdoc stands for the current release number). 3. Click Open. The part is opened and a message appears, informing you that it is read-only. Simply close it. The part will remain displayed in the window, whatever views you create from it.
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3. Now, in the part window, select the desired planar surface of the 3D part.
4. On the sheet, a blue knob appears, as well as a green frame containing a preview of the view to be created. The knob lets you define the location and orientation of the view to be created, using the blue manipulators: top, bottom, left, right or rotated according to a given snapping, or according to a specified rotation angle. 5. Click on the drawing sheet or at the center of the blue knob to generate the view.
6. A progress bar appears temporarily, showing the view creation progress. The front view is created.
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2. Define the projection view position, for example the right view position, using the cursor.
3. Note that the left view shown here was created and therefore positioned according to ISO standards and the First Angle Projection method. For more information, refer to Creating Views via the Wizard. 4. Click to generate the view. A progress bar appears while the view is being created.
once again.
6. Use the cursor to define the projection view position, for example the bottom view position, and click to generate the view. Once again, a progress bar appears during the view creation process. The views result as shown here.
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2. Select the holes and points to define the cutting profile on the view. SmartPick assists you when creating the profile. Note that selecting a circular edge, a linear edge, an axis line or a center line (for example, a hole) makes the view callout associative by default to the corresponding 3D feature. If you select a circle, the callout will go through the circle center. If you select an edge, the callout will be parallel to the selected edge.
If you are not satisfied with the profile you create, you can, at any time, use the Undo or Redo icons.
As you select the second point, the section plane appears and moves dynamically on the 3D part while you define the profile on the drawing. This section plane will automatically disappear when you double-click to end the callout definition.
3. Double-click to end the cutting profile creation. A preview is displayed. 4. Define the section view position using the cursor.
Positioning the view also defines the section view direction, as if it were a left or a right projection view. The direction of the callout blue arrows changes as you change the cursor position. 6. Click to generate the view. A progress bar appears while the view is being created. Using the cursor, you can then position the section view in order to align it, or to not align it, to the front view.
The patterns which are used to represent sections are defined in the standards. For more information, refer to Pattern Definition in the Interactive Drafting User's Guide. You may modify the pattern (hatching, dotting, coloring or motif). For more information, refer to Modifying a Pattern.
2. Click where you want to position the callout center. 3. Drag the cursor to define the callout radius, and click when you are satisfied.
6. A progress bar appears while the view is being created. 7. If you are not satisfied with the position of the detail view, you can drag and drop it to a new position.
8. As in step 4, the scale is, by default, twice that of the active view. You can
13. The dimension is created. Move your cursor to where you want to position the dimension, and click to generate the dimension. If you are not satisfied with the position of the dimension, you can drag and drop it to a new position.
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Opening an Assembly
This task will show you how to open the 3D assembly from which you will create views in the Generative Drafting workbench, as well as perform other operations. Note that you may create views from both 3D assemblies and parts. Refer to the Part Drawing section of this tutorial for information on how to use parts. 1. Select File > Open..., or click Open The File Selection dialog box appears. 2. Select the assembly to be opened, the GEAR-REDUCER_GS.CATProduct document. Note that this sample document is to be found in the C: Files\Dassault \Program in the Standard toolbar.
Systemes\ Bxxdoc\ English\ online\ cfysm_C2\samples \Dra fting folder (where xx in Bxxdoc stands for the current release number). 3. Click Open. The assembly is opened and will remain displayed in the window, whatever views you create from it.
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4. Choose a style from the Style of Titleblock drop-down list. For the purpose of this exercise, choose Drawing_Titleblock_Sample1. You can notice that a preview of the frame and title block is displayed in the dialog box. 5. Click the action you want to perform from the list of actions; in this case, click Creation. 6. Click OK. Wait while the frame and title block are being created.
7. Select Edit > Working Views from the menu bar to switch back to the working views.
The View Wizard (Step 1/2): Predefined Configurations dialog box is displayed.
2. Click Configuration 3 using the 1st angle projection method to create a front, a top and a left view using the ISO standard/first angle projection method. 3. Click Next > to go to the second step of the wizard. The View Wizard (Step 2/2): Arranging the Configuration dialog box is now displayed with a new set of view buttons.
6. Then, click on the desired plane on the 3D assembly to define the reference plane.
7. On the sheet, a blue knob appears, as well as three green frames containing a preview of the views to be created. 8. The knob lets you define the location and orientation of the views to be created, using the blue manipulators: top, bottom, left, right or rotated according to a given snapping, or according to a specified rotation angle. 9. Click on the drawing sheet or at the center of the blue knob to generate the views. A progress bar appears temporarily, showing the view creation progress. The front, top and left views of the selected sub-assembly are created.
You may need to move the views to position them properly on the drawing. To do this, simply drag the front view (i.e. the active view with a red frame) with the cursor and drop it when you are satisfied with the position of the views.
The first point of the cutting profile is automatically created on the view. The section plane appears and moves dynamically on the 3D sub-assembly while you define the profile on the drawing.
4. Double-click the last point of the cutting profile to end its creation.
5. The section plane automatically disappears, and a preview is displayed. 6. Define the section view position using the cursor. Positioning the view also defines the section view direction, as if it were a left or a right projection view. The direction of the callout blue arrows changes as you change the cursor position. 7. Click to generate the view. A progress bar appears while the view is being created.
In our example, the various parts use a material to which a specific pattern is associated. In this case, it is the pattern associated to this material which is used. For more information, refer to View Generation Definition in the Interactive Drafting User's Guide. You may modify the pattern (hatching, dotting, coloring or motif). For more information, refer to Modifying a Pattern.
Generate Balloons
Note that the assembly components have previously been numbered in the Product Structure workbench using the Generate Numbering command.
4. Optionally zoom the drawing to take a closer look at the balloons and/or the Bill of Material.
2. Sketch the representation of the plane by clicking a point and then an edge, or an edge, on the right view. Both the 3D surface and the sketched plane are associative. The selected edge becomes a line that you can position where desired using the cursor. This line/callout will be automatically used as the plane. 3. Click to position the callout. The reference plane is automatically positioned according to the selected edge. Positioning the auxiliary view callout amounts to defining the auxiliary view
4. Click to position the auxiliary view. Before clicking, as you move the cursor within a zone perpendicular to the plane, a preview of the auxiliary view to be created appears. This view will be automatically positioned accordingly. This is also true when creating a section view or a section cut. You can also move the cursor outside the zone perpendicular to the plane and position the view where you want. Note that the callout can be inverted or graphically modified.
You can choose the auxiliary view axis orientation. To do this, go to Tools > Options > Mechanical Design > Drafting > Layout and select the Auxiliary and/or section views orientation according to profile check box. You can move the view freely after it has been created, providing you position it independently of its reference view. To do this: a. Right-click the frame of the view you want to move. b. Select View Positioning > Position Independently of Reference View. c. Drag the view to the desired location.
4. Select the scene (Scene.1) in the specification tree or in the geometry area, and then select a plane on the product. 5. Click in the drawing to position the resulting exploded view. Non exploded product: Exploded product:
You can insert Bill of Material information into the active view. Remember that you must select the scene before creating a view, otherwise
The Bill of Material will not be rerouted if you replace its source product (the product from which it was generated). In this case, you need to generate a new Bill of Material.
Note that the number of characters authorized in a line can be set precisely for fonts with a fixed-size case only. In the case of fonts with a variable-size case, it is not possible to know exactly how many characters will fit on a line (because the size of the text depends on the characters entered). In this case, the specified number corresponds to the minimum number of characters that you can enter on a line. Bill Of Material cells are associated to the Product Structure Attributes.
1. Replace the Part Number "pm6-7b-1e shunt to body washer" by "New Name" (for this edit Part Properties in the Part contextual menu, and change the Part Number in Product tab). 2. Update the drawing. The Bill of Material has changed, "pm6-7b-1e shunt to body washer" is replaced by "New Name".
3. Add a new product under this product, and then a new part under the newlycreated product (for more information, refer to the Part Design User's Guide and to the Assembly Design User's Guide). 4. Update the drawing.
5. Remove the product you added in step 3 and update the drawing once again. The Bill of Material is updated accordingly.
The balloons that were previously created on the CATProduct are automatically generated onto the active view. 3. If needed, multi-select these balloons and modify the font size in the Text Properties toolbar. You can also select and drag a balloon to change its position. 4. If needed, create a circle around the text of the balloons: right-click a balloon (or multi-select several and right-click) and select Properties > Text > Frame > Circle. Click OK. A circle is created around the texts. Balloons generated Balloons after the font size and position were modified:
5. If needed, insert a bill of material into the active view (Insert > Generation > Bill of Material from the menu bar).
3. In the Tools Palette which is displayed, you can choose: o o The format of the dimension: Length x Length (19,1 x 19,1 in our example) Length x Angle (19.1 x - 46deg84'8" in our example) Angle x Length (- 46deg84'8" x 19.1 in our example) Length (19,1) The representation mode: One symbol Two symbols
You can also access these options using the contextual menu: at any time during the chamfer dimension creation, you can right-click to display the contextual menu. 5. Choose the Length x Length format and the One symbol mode 6. Select the element to be dimensioned. 7. Select a reference line or surface. 8. You have two options: .
Click on the sheet to end the dimension creation. The chamfer dimension is computed with an implicit second reference line that is perpendicular to the first one.
Select a second reference line or surface. In this case, the chamfer dimension is computed according to both reference lines you selected. In a Generative Drafting context (i.e. in the case of a generative view), you must do this, i.e. you must explicitly select the second reference line.
9. In any case, the dimension is associated to all the elements you selected.
3. In the Tools Palette which is displayed (as well as in the contextual menu), you can choose the format of the dimension and the representation mode. For more information, refer to step 2 in Creating chamfer dimensions manually.
Choose the Length x Length format and the One symbol mode
4. Fly the mouse over the element to be dimensioned. You can notice that, depending on where you position the cursor, the auto-detection agent indicates a different order for taking elements into account when creating the chamfer dimension: o o o 1 indicates the element to be dimensioned. 2 indicates the line which will be used as the first reference. 3 indicates the line which will be used as the second reference.
5. Click when you are satisfied with the order offered by the auto-detection agent. For example, click to accept the 3 - 1 - 2 order. The chamfer dimension is computed according to the first and the second auto-detected reference lines. At this stage, if you are not satisfied with the order you just accepted, or if your chamfer is not detected, you can still click to select the first reference line, and, optionally, the second reference line. This amounts to creating the chamfer dimension manually. 6. Click to end the chamfer dimension creation.
When creating chamfer dimension on cylindrical shapes in a Generative Drafting context, remember that: in the case of projection views, the projection plane needs to be parallel to the cylinder axis. in the case of section views or section cuts, the section plane needs to to be parallel to, and to go through, the cylinder axis. the sketched profile on which the cylinder (or the cone) is based must be a circle. All settings defined in Tools > Option > Mechanical Design > Drafting (Dimensions and Manipulators tabs) are taken into account when creating chamfer dimensions. When editing chamfer dimension text properties (Edit > Properties command, Dimension Texts tab), any information (e.g. associated text, fake dimension, tolerance, text before/after, etc.) added to the main value, will actually be positioned according to the first value (excluding the "x" symbol, e.g. "19,1"). This information will be positioned in the following order: Text Before/Prefix/first value/Tolerance/Suffix/Text After/second value (including the "x" symbol, e.g. "x 20,37"). An example is provided below, with a Text After.
When re-routing chamfer dimensions which have only two reference elements (the element to be dimensioned and a single reference line or surface), you will need to select three reference elements.
2. Select a hole, for example. Make sure you do not click in the drawing or on the dimension, as this would validate the creation. 3. Right-click the dimension. 4. Select the required dimension type from the displayed contextual menu. For example, Radius Center. The diameter dimension is automatically turned into a radius dimension. 5. Click in the drawing to validate the dimension creation. If needed, you can modify the dimension location.
6. When you display the contextual menu during the dimension creation, you can define the value orientation with the Screen, View or Dimension line as reference, or still Horizontal, Vertical or according to a Fixed angle. These options are available in the Value Orientation dialog box.
1. Click Text
2. Click where you want to insert the free text on the drawing. A green frame appears, as well as the Text Editor dialog box. 3. If you want to specify the horizontal boundary of the text, drag the frame to where you want to place the boundary. If you want the horizontal boundary to adjust to your text, proceed with the following step.
4. Type your text in the Text Editor dialog box: "free text", for example.
5. The drawing is automatically updated with the text you are typing in the Text Editor dialog box. o You can copy text from another application and paste it into the Text Editor dialog box, and vice-versa. Note that the text layout and properties will not be preserved when copying/pasting. When copying/pasting an engineering symbol (such as Phi for example) in the text editor, note that the symbol is pasted as a plain character. As a result, if the symbol does not exist in the current font, the resulting character in the drawing may be different. You cannot copy complex objects (such as tables) from another application.
6. When you are done typing your text, click OK in the Text Editor dialog box, click
Although you can create a text in a view that is not up-to-date, you cannot associate it to geometry. If you try to do so, a message appears, indicating that the selected or active view is not up-to-date.
2. Click the CATDrawing (GenDrafting_part_03.CATDrawing) and click the Replicate icon in the Annotations toolbar (Texts sub-toolbar).
3. Select the text to be replicated. The new replicated text automatically appears under the cursor. 4. Click where you want the new text to be positioned. The hole diameter automatically corresponds to the diameter of Hole1 you selected on the part.
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Prefix - Suffix: you can insert either a symbol or a text before the dimension text or a text after the dimension text. You cannot insert a prefix and a suffix. When one of them is inserted the other one is deactivated. If you want to remove the symbol before the dimension text, click the Insert Symbol icon and, from the list of symbols that appears, select the None symbol: . Associated Texts: you can insert texts before, after, below and above the main and the dual value.
Dimension score options: you can choose to score only the value, all dimension texts or not to score (for Main Value and/or Dual Value). Dimension frame options: you can choose to include in the frame Value+tolerance+texts or Value+tolerance or Value for Main Value, Dual Value or both.
Font: choose the font. Style: choose the font style. Size: choose the font size. Underline: underline the dimension text. Color: choose the font color. Strikethrough: draw a line through the dimension text.
The image is a native V5 Drafting element, it is positioned by default at the origin of the view. The anchor point of the picture corresponds to its lower left-hand corner. o In the Properties dialog box available from the image's contextual menu, on the Picture tab, check the Lock aspect ratio option to make sure images will keep their ratio aspect. o If the previous option is unchecked, use the Ctrl key to keep the picture ratio aspect. o Use the Shift key to snap to the grid. 6. Drag the image to the required position.
Printing a Sheet
This task will show you how to print a given sheet. You may also print several sheets if a drawing contains several of them. Open the Product_Balloon.CATDrawing document. 1. Select File > Print from the menu bar. The Print dialog box is displayed.
2. Choose your print options as required: o o o o The Printers area lets you choose the printer you want to use or specify whether you want to print to a file. The Layout tab lets you define the sheet orientation, position and size. The MultiDocuments tab lets you specify additional choices if the current document contains several sheets. The Print Area area lets you define whether you want to print: the entire sheet: Whole Document the sheet as seen on screen: Display button: Selection. the area selected using the Select Mode Refer to Printing using a Clipping Operator for more information. the print area previously defined for the sheet: Document area. This print area is defined (and activated) in the sheet properties. Refer to Editing Sheet Properties for more information. Note that the Document area option appears in the Print Area drop-down list only if you activated the print area in the sheet properties prior to accessing the Print dialog box. The Copies field lets you specify the number of copies to print. pages. The Tiling option lets you tile the sheet and print it on several The Page Setup... button lets you define the page setup. The Options... button lets you define additional options. The Preview... button lets you preview the document to be printed.