An Error Has Occurred And Solidworks Needs To Restart Hatas
crash, but to users of SOLIDWORKS the result is the same. GDI objects are used to draw window elements that are not in the graphics area in SolidWorks. For maximum performance the Graphics area takes advantage of OpenGL which gives more direct access to the video processing hardware. GDI objects are used for the chrome of the graphics area, so every time a new document is opened the number of GDI objects used by SOLIDWORKS will increase. Prior so SOLIDWORKS 2011 SP4 if a part was open in an assembly and its own window when that window was closed it would not release those GDI objects. The default behaviour now is to release those handles, however not all of them are released. What does all this have to do with SOLIDWORKS crashing? Windows has a default limit that a single process can only access 10,000 GDI objects. Since SolidWorks does not release all objects when a document is closed that number it uses continuously increases with each new document opened. Can this be used to predict when SOLIDWORKS will crash? Predicting a SOLIDWORKS Crash As mentioned earlier this is not technically a crash, if SOLIDWORKS reaches the 10,000 object limit windows terminates the process. This is not caused by unhandled code error or memory sharing issues or anything else that causes a crash. This is simply windows saying SOLIDWORKS is being too much of a resource hog and closes it to get those resources back. But since there is a specific number at which it closes if you can monitor that number you can predict when it will happen. As it turns out it is actually very easy to monitor. Simply follow these steps: Open task manager (you can right click on the task bar and click task manager) Click View, Select Columns… Select Columns in Windows Task Manager Check off GDI Objects and click OK Display GDI Objects Â
»engineeringcommentsWant to join? Log in or sign up in seconds.|Englishlimit my search to /r/engineeringuse the following search parameters to narrow your results:subreddit:subredditfind submissions in "subreddit"author:usernamefind submissions by "username"site:example.comfind submissions from "example.com"url:textsearch for "text" in urlselftext:textsearch for "text" in self post contentsself:yes (or self:no)include (or exclude) self postsnsfw:yes (or nsfw:no)include (or exclude) results marked as NSFWe.g. subreddit:aww site:imgur.com dogsee the search faq for details.advanced search: by author, subreddit...this post http://www.javelin-tech.com/blog/2014/02/solidworks-crashing/ was submitted on 24 Oct 2013143 points (94% upvoted)shortlink: remember mereset passwordloginSubmit a new linkSubmit a new text postengineeringsubscribeunsubscribe121,247 readers~92 users here nowWhat is /r/engineering for? 1) Sharing information, knowledge, experience related to the principles and practice of https://www.reddit.com/r/engineering/comments/1p4tpo/a_very_helpful_solidworks_error/ all types of engineering: civil, structural, mechanical, electrical, aerospace, chemical, computer, environmental, etc. 2) Questions about current engineering projects you are working on, how to interpret codes and standards, and industry practice are all encouraged. Engineers should help each other to make the world a safer and better place. 3) Images related to engineering are accepted provided they are relevant to engineering. Completed projects, destructive test results, and unique machinery and hardware are all acceptable and encouraged. Lead-in comments are encouraged to provide context to the readers. Rules 1) Questions related to school aren't allowed, try /r/EngineeringStudents. 2) Questions about 'how s
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