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The Big Book of SolidWorks Selections Tricks (In One Little Post)

by Josh on March 17, 2009 · View Comments

Guess what. You’re most likely moving a little mouse cursor around, selecting this link or that link (clicking anything to escape this post?), perhaps not realizing that soon, instead of a mouse cursor you’ll be using your digits or some other multi-point device.

We’ll get into that tech in future posts. For now, we’ll take a look at just how many selection options you and your little cursor friends currently have in SolidWorks. Some you probably use. Some you may yell sensibilities at.

However you use SolidWorks, you are selectin’ things with blazing speed, or would like to. Here’s all the types you can use and some tips to make your finger burn right through those mouse buttons.


Training on Selection
It may seem odd, but selecting things takes a bit of training in these big ol’ 3D CAD programs, even SolidWorks. It’s not always intuitive, but even more, people may just not know all the ways of selecting items, even basic selection. Fortunately, that’s becoming less common as, ya know, they die off and 2 year old’s that can reprogram 3D mice take over. Just sayin’.

Basic Selection Tools
Let’s start real basic and then just go insane with selection options. You should have these down or start slapping your self lightly, slowly building to a good hard punch… as I have done in the past.

Ctrl-select
Pick items, Hold Ctrl down to keep them selected. Good for selecting lines for measuring or parts to delete.

Shift-select
Hold Shift down to select a series of components. Good for selecting a series of items in the FeatureManager

Box-select
Pick and hold down that left button while you drag a rectangle across items. Good for selecting groups of objects.

Right-Click
You have even more selections with the right-click menu. You need to know about them. We’ll get into them below.

Intermediate Selection Tools
Ok, that takes care of the ones everyone should know about. Here’s the next stage, a few others that are less common, but will make people wonder what the heck you are doing to select components.

Right-clickin’ Select Other
Used to select through faces behind other faces. Tip: Cycle through the selection by continuing to right-click.

Selection filters

Allows you to limit what’s selected. Tip: Take a few that you use regularly and put them on your main toolbar or use the Selection Filter Flyout.

The Real-View Glow
Show up when Real-View is on and you select something. Tip: Use in design reviews to make selection more clear.

Select through Transparency
Select behind transparent objects. Tip: Turn the option off in Options, System Options, Display/Selections. Use the Shift key to toggle this selection on when needed. Saves on memory usage.

Advanced Selection Tools
You may not now it, but there’s quit a variety of selection tools at your disposal in the Select Tool pulldown. There a bit more uncommon, but once you know about what they do, they can be really powerful. Here they are with some tips.

Volume select
Selects components inside a volume. Tip: Go normal to a plane, draw a selection box and adjust the arrow that appear. Click on the volume to select what’s inside.

Select Suppressed
Selects all the suppressed items in your model, even if you can see them. Tip: Set up a shortcut key to Unsuppress items. Use this selection and hit that key. Fast.

Select Hidden
Works the same as Select Supressed. Tip: Set up a shrtcut key to Unhide items. Use this selection and hit that key. Yes, Fast.

Select Mated To…
Select this, then a part. It selects everything mated to it. Tip: Use it to find items that would be considered interfering parts. Use a shortcut key to suppress them.

Select Internal Components
Selects all the items inside a your external part. Tip: Use to create sub-assemblies of internals or add items quickly to folders.

Select Toolbox
Selects Toolbox parts Tip: Good for finding and deleting toolbox parts… or you can use this to find toolbox parts, create hardware stack assemblies and pattern them.

Advanced Select
Allow you to set your own selection criteria. Nearly endless possibilities. Tip: Use to find items with a certain weight or display setting. Save the search and share with others.

Part Selection Tools
Here’s where it gets really interesting. As if all those selection tools were not enough, you have a load of’em when your working inside parts and assemblies. Let’s take quick look.

Select Chain
Selects a group of sketch entities. Tip: Use to quickly select and convert sketches used in top-down, sketch-driven assemblies.

Select Midpoint
Selects a midpoint on a line, curve or edge. Tip: Use to create relations or even mate to.

Select Tangent
Like Select Chain, but for model geometry. Tip: Use to quickly select and convert groups of edges.

Select Loop
Allows you the option of selecting between closed contours. Tip: Use to quickly select and convert groups of edges for faces.

Contour Select Tool
Selects closed sketch profiles. Tip: Use to select profiles when working with imported sketches.

Select Connected Faces
New in SolidWorks 2009, SP2.0 – This gives you a ton of selection options. You’ll have different options depending on your selection. Tip: Use to find Co-planer surfaces or select a group of surfaces for an offset surface.

That pretty much wraps up many of the selection options you have in SolidWorks. I hope it helps you explore the amazing world of selecting things with a cursor before we move to grabbing items with our fingertips. Beyond this, I’m sure you have some selection tips of your own. How do you use these tools? Are there any tricks you can add?

{ 25 comments }

Rod_Uding March 17, 2009 at 11:23 am

Quite a wordy post my good man, however it does get into the meat and potatoes of selecting goodies. You even brought up some stuff I have never used but may be more likely to now. Overall score for the post is 9.9 out of 10.

gol10dr March 17, 2009 at 11:28 am

Nice post Josh! I did a podcast on this topic awhile back and it amazes me how many options we have for selection. This is one of those areas that people get into a rut and use the same tools they have for years. It is always good to get a “Did you know…” post to kick us all to try a new way that may save us a few clicks!

JeffMirisola March 17, 2009 at 11:53 am

Another great post, Josh. Tu es muy intellegente. (Ok, my Spanish needs work)

Josh M March 17, 2009 at 11:55 am

Man, I totally missedyou podcast. I need to give it a listen and make sure everything I wrote is correct! or see if I missed anything! do you have a link?

Josh M March 17, 2009 at 11:58 am

Thanks Jeff! You always have sweet words to say to me. .. just glad they're from a distance :) oh, and thanks for the espanolly – my in-laws, in town this week, will appreciate it.

Josh M March 17, 2009 at 12:03 pm

Wow, thanks Rod! I don't think I'd give myself 9.9 ;) – I did have to write the post twice though due to a browser crash, so it's extra special, ya know.

Bradley Grzesiak March 17, 2009 at 12:34 pm

My favorite is left-oriented vs. right-oriented box select. If you create a box by dragging to the right, you select only those components that are entirely within the box. If, on the other hand, you create the box by dragging to the left, you select all components which touch the interior of the box, but aren't necessarily entirely contained therein.

JeffMirisola March 17, 2009 at 12:58 pm

De nada, Josh. Yo habla pocito espanol.

gol10dr March 17, 2009 at 7:10 pm

It was actually the show before I interviewed you last summer before my son was born. Some that you mentioned were not in SW yet but I did mention some in the Utilities too. Here is the show…http://media.libsyn.com/media/gol10dr/SWH-EP160.mp3 Again…nice post buddy!

gol10dr March 17, 2009 at 7:11 pm

Ahh. The old ACAD cross selection…Yes box select vs. cross select. One of those old tools that is great to have in SW for sure.

daniel March 18, 2009 at 8:36 am

This is great stuff! While reading this, I'm reminded of a tip from the conference about selecting internal edges when you are converting edges from sketch mode. Typically, when you select a face, it will grab only the outside edges, but if you select that face and any internal edge, you convert the inside edges instead. Maybe this is common knowledge, but it was a revelation for me!

btitus March 18, 2009 at 5:29 pm

Great post. But when will SolidWorks know what I want to select BEFORE I select it???

Adam March 24, 2009 at 9:16 pm

Question about the Select Mated To… tool. Is that SW09 only? I”m in SW08 and can't find it. That would make my life sooo much easier!

Josh M March 25, 2009 at 7:07 am

Adam, man, I'm having trouble remembering. If it's there, it would be on the Sketch toolbar, first icon with a flyout menu.

Adam March 25, 2009 at 7:25 pm

AHA! Found it – I'm a tard. Thanks Josh. :)

Josh M March 26, 2009 at 7:07 am

Phew! Cool, glad you found it! Extremely helpful tool huh. I've been using the volume select a lot lately. totally rocks.

Deepak Gupta May 21, 2009 at 5:29 am

Nice post Josh! Something really useful for beginners as well good info for the people who are not using them often

gupta9665 May 21, 2009 at 5:33 am

Nice post Josh! Something really useful for the beginners and for the people who doesn't use these much often or don't know much about these options.

Josh M May 21, 2009 at 9:21 am

Thank you! sometime the simple stuff gets overlooked huh.

Deepak Gupta May 21, 2009 at 10:29 am

Nice post Josh! Something really useful for beginners as well good info for the people who are not using them often

gupta9665 May 21, 2009 at 10:33 am

Nice post Josh! Something really useful for the beginners and for the people who doesn't use these much often or don't know much about these options.

Josh M May 21, 2009 at 2:21 pm

Thank you! sometime the simple stuff gets overlooked huh.

Ocell April 2, 2010 at 10:05 pm

I had to visit this old post and mention that I discovered Selection Manager recently, and it has changed my life. No more creating sketches to loft between two complex edges in a single loft. Now I can just use Selection Manager to chain some edges together.

Josh M April 5, 2010 at 1:39 pm

Thanks Chris! I'm going to have to update some of these older posts… or make new ones.

weewilly April 17, 2010 at 2:06 am

That was an amazing list Josh. Great post buddy.

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