The deletion of a feature can affect features that are geometrically dependent on it. Some dependent features can be deleted, others can be left "floating" without a parent feature, and some can lose optional constraints.
The following features are automatically deleted:
You can drag features below the End of Part marker to exclude them temporarily from processing. For example, drag a fillet below the marker when creating a large pattern, and then drag the fillet back after the pattern is generated.
Features below the marker can be individually suppressed or unsuppressed, or deleted all at once.
Conditional suppression is useful for custom iParts, for example. You can create different part configurations with different feature suppression status.
Before a feature is deleted, the dependent features to delete are highlighted in the graphics window and in the browser. You can decide how you want to handle the features and sketches that are selected for deletion. The behavior of the feature and its dependents is as follows:
You can usually retain a dependent feature if it is related to the feature you want to delete by a constraint or dimension. If the feature is dependent on a planar face or work feature, it can be retained, but is tagged in the browser by a special icon.
If you retain a dependent feature, it can contain unresolved geometry (such as projected geometry from the deleted feature). The feature is unresolved until you edit it to remove extraneous geometry or constrain it to stabilize its shape and size.