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Using Views (2.4)Using Views (2.4)Adding and configuring interactive visualisationsApplies to verison 2.4 only; Omniscope 2.4 offered 14 different views, but version 2.5 has expanded this to 16, with the former Tree View being replaced by the new Network View. You can use these views in any combination to help you and recipients of your files analyse and illustrate the messages in your data. Omniscope views offer much more than just data visualisation and portable/exportable charting and presentation. Most views are complete data navigation environments enabling browsing, aggregation, analysis, filtering and drill-down to details. All views set to show the same data subset/named query e.g. 'Filtered data (IN)' or 'Errors for Correction' update simultaneously to reflect filtering actions. Adding Viewson the Main Toolbar displays the vertical View Chooser drop-down menu. The same display can be use to change a view window from one view to another by clicking on the left-corner view icon on the View Toolbar. On the View Chooser, each View is represented by its own icon:
Click on the view icons above or the names below to go directly to the discussion of each individual view:
*To see the experimental views available in your version, tick this advanced option, then re-start your Omniscope: Some of the views are slightly different: Web View - opens browser window(s) showing linked web pages and the results of web services associated with the data set. Content View - displays free text commentary and links to web assets, including images and charts not referenced in the data set Dial View - creates typical dashboard-style gauges to display field (column) composition, progress and alert conditions, etc. Details View - displays all (non-hidden) values for each single record, together with images and buttons/links connecting to related web pages/services. DataPlayer View - allows anyone to create interactive Flash DataPlayers encapsulating the data in exportable 'dashboards' for documents and web pages. Manipulating View WindowsIf you wish to arrange more than one view on a tab, you can control the amount of space and the order of each view. Immediately to the right of the Help command is the Add View drop down menu, used to add an additional view to the current display. To remove a view from the display, click on the [X] in the upper right hand corner of the view. To change a window from one view to another, click on the view name and select the view you want from the drop-down menu. If you want to add a view showing another data subset, you can select it using the Data Subset drop-down to the right of the view name in each View Toolbar.There is no upper limit on the number of views you can open in Omniscope, but display screen size limitations encourage using multiple tabs to display different combinations of views, rather than crowding the working display with too many open views. Hint: It is best to first create a layout of view windows the right size and shape for each view, then switch each window to be the desired View. Easier than Rubik's Cube! Using View barometersIn addition to the Main Toolbar barometer, many views display view-specific barometers whenever they are displaying a data subset different form the Filtered (IN) subset. View Toolbar Common FeaturesOptions for each view are generally available on the View Toolbar. Many of the commands available from the View Toolbar > View Tools drop-down menu are common to all views. Commands or options common to all (or most) views are documented here: View Tools common commands. Using View Toolbars (2.4)Applies to version 2.4 and prior Each View has a View Toolbar, which presents the features and options applicable to that View, including a View Chooser, Data Sub-Set selector, Aggregation options, a View tools drop-down menu, Fields (columns) picker and other options specific to each view. View Toolbars open and close at the top of each view window. All views and View Toolbars always open below the Main Toolbar, whose commands apply to all open views. View Toolbars vary in appearance, since each View features different controls on the toolbar, but they typically look like this:
[update to 2.4] View chooser - switching or closing viewsIn the left corner of each View Toolbar is the View icon which identifies the view currently selected. Clicking this icon also reveals the vertical View Chooser drop-down from which you can change the view shown in that window. On the right-most end of all View Toolbars is the Close View icon, shown as a black [X]. Click this icon to close the view. You can always bring closed views (or new, additional views) back by clicking this icon on the Main Toolbar: Queries & Subsets selector - defining the data subset in each viewBy default, new views will open with the Data Subset selector set to 'Filtered data (IN)' meaning you're looking at all the records that meet the filtering criteria expressed on the Side Bar. You can change the Query/Subset of the data shown in the view using the drop-down selector. More on Queries & Subsets Aggregation menu - defining the aggregation of records in the viewBeginning with version 2.4, many Views include an Aggregation drop-down menu, used to define aggregated views of the data, together with the function to be applied when aggregating each field (column). Aggregation differs from the presentational Grouping options available only in the Table View. Unlike Grouping, the end user is not meant to 'unroll' or 'drill down' the defined aggregation to the lower level of granularity. User-interactive Grouping can be used in addition to Aggregation. For example, a file with each row defined as an observation for a given day can be aggregated by week, then grouped by month and year. In the resulting Table View, an end user would be able to unroll the groupings down to weeks, but to see the maximum granularity daily data, they would have to remove the Aggregation settings. |