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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
117 of 119 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Great introduction to a lot of nuances in the software,
By A Customer
This review is from: Inside SolidWorks (Paperback)
People who go to the SolidWorks user group on Deja News know Dave Murray as a regular poster who really knows his stuff; his book confirms the breadth of his knowledge, and does it in the same easy to access style that he writes with to the newsgroup. I had been a 40+ hour a week user of SolidWorks for over a year when I ran across Inside SolidWorks. Reading this book got me excited, because even after all of my time with the software (with tons of experimentation and late nights attempting to create 'challenging' parts) this book opened my eyes to a lot of stuff that I would have never thought to try on my own and would otherwise have had no real good reason to know. Every few pages I ran across a little nugget that increased my productivity, or encouraged me to try something I didn't know was possible. Though the majority of it will be review, I think that advance users will get their 50 bucks worth just out of learning a few things that will get them home a little earlier. (note to advanced users: don't expect to learn much new stuff about sweeps, lofts, or filleting. In depth details on these black arts are beyond the scope of this book)It's beginners, however, that will realize the greatest benefit. After doing the standard 30 minute jump start tutorial, I would recommend that a new guy put aside the tutorial book that comes with the software and instead spend their time digging into Inside SolidWorks. It does a very clear job of introducing the software (especially the mindset required for modeling with a feature based modeler), with a special focus on how to avoid the standard problems and sidestep the pitfalls that new users usually encounter. I wish that I had Inside SolidWOrks when going through the steep part of my learning curve. The big disappointment with the book? Like most SolidWorks tutorials, this book almost completely sidesteps the most challenging and potentially rewarding part of using the software: building parts in the context of an assembly (what is often called the 'top down' method). An extra chapter on 'in context relationships', good modeling practices when building parts from inside assemblies, and a good introduction on how parametric relationships can make or destroy your parts would have made this a five star book. Every user who builds from the top down knows the crushing pain of moving a component in an assembly and seeing the feature trees of some or all of his/her components turn red with rebuild errors (the guy I sit next to refers to this phenomenon as seeing his screen fill with blood); I would have liked to see the author tackle this complicated issue with the same thoroughness and competence that he approaches all of the other subjects
19 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Not a very good Reference book,
This review is from: Inside Solidworks (Paperback)
I have learned three CAD systems; AutoCAD, Pro/E, and SW in the past six years. By far, SolidWorks is the easiest and the finest product in my opinion. I have read numerous CAD instructional manuals, books, and taken countless instructional classes.
I have been using SW for two plus years, and I needed a hard copy of various commands and procedures for a quick reference, namely a reference book. As one reviewer stated, "This is the big fat reference book." The author stated, "this invaluable how-to and reference manual clearly marks functionality specific to SolidWorks 2006 for users who have not yet upgraded to the latest release." The book is fairly clear and concise in certain areas, but is lacking big time in others; "under explained sections and unfriendly syntax. The way the book provides information is very bewildering and chaotic. There are few major changes between 2005 and 2006, but there was a major change in the Hole Wizard that was not captured in the book. I wonder how many other changes are missing? I would not advise this book as a reference book, or a SW book for any serious user.
19 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Not even for free,
By Nedi Bourne (West Kingston, RI) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Inside SolidWorks 2003 (Paperback)
I obtained a copy of this book for free. I read the reviews:"This book is full of errors when it comes to SolidWorks 2003". "One feels the author was too lazy to create a real world set of examples and instead loves to hear himself expound on his CAD knowledge (which sadly is very faulty)". "Why do people buy a book like this"? But, it was free. I know now why the person gave me the book... It was not worth the time I spent looking through it. Do not make the same mistake I did. This was not a helpful or useful book.
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