App DocumentObject

Introduction


An App DocumentObject object, or formally an, is the base class of all object classes handled in the document.

In general terms, a "DocumentObject" is any "thing" that can appear in the Tree view, and which is saved and restored when opening a document.





Usage
The App DocumentObject is an internal class, so it cannot be created from the graphical interface, nor is it meant to be used by itself. It just defines the basic behavior and properties of objects in the program.

Some of the most important DocumentObjects are the following:
 * The App FeaturePython class, an empty object that can be used for different purposes, depending on the added properties.
 * The App GeoFeature class, the base object of all geometrical objects, that is, of objects that have a Placement property that defines their position in the 3D view.
 * The Part Feature class, derived from App GeoFeature, and the parent class of objects with 2D and 3D topological shapes.
 * The Mesh Feature class, derived from App GeoFeature, and the parent class of objects with 2D and 3D meshes.

Properties
See Property for all property types that scripted objects can have.

These are the basic properties that essentially all objects have. These properties can be accessed from the Python console.


 * : the user editable name of this object, it is an arbitrary UTF8 string. By default, it is the same as the.
 * : a longer, user editable description of this object, it is an arbitrary UTF8 string that may include newlines. By default, it is an empty string.
 * : a list of expressions.
 * : whether to display the object or not.

For derived objects, only will be listed in the property editor by default. The other properties will be hidden.

Scripting
FreeCAD Scripting Basics and scripted objects.

See Part Feature for the general information on adding objects to the document.

A DocumentObject is created with the method of the document. However, in general, there is no need to create this object manually. It is usually better to subclass one of the more complex classes, for example, App FeaturePython, App GeoFeature, Part Feature, Part Part2DObject, etc.