Mate Error Examples Contents Example: Conflicting Mates At times a mate cannot be satisfied because the components are constrained in such a way that they cannot move into the mate. The components can be fixed or mated to other components. Example: Conflicts Between Mates and In-context Features Mating conflicts happen when you create in-context sketch relations and then create distance mates using the components and entities that use the sketch relations. Example: Design Errors and Mating Sometimes the geometry in or between your components appears to be accurate, but is slightly wrong. Example: Concentric Mate Error Example: Fixing Redundant Distance Mates This assembly shows only yellow warning symbols (no red errors). Run MateXpert to diagnose the problem. Example: Mates to Dangling Geometry When you change the geometry of a component so that the mate can no longer be satisfied, the mate becomes dangling. Parent topicSolving Mate Problems Mate Errors MateXpert Repairing a Missing Mate Reference Techniques for Fixing Mate Problems Mated Entities PropertyManager Globally Replacing Failed Mate References Missing Entities Pop-Up Toolbar