Working with Navigation and View Tools
The navigation and view tools let you navigate through models, analyses etc. and control how you see your models.
Navigate through Open Models, Analyses etc.
In order to navigate through models, analyses etc. you recently viewed:
Click the < and > arrows at the top right corner of the program window. The previous or next model is brought to the foreground. The models are ordered according to the sequence in which they were opened.
Click the Opened views button at the top right corner of the program window. Any models you recently viewed are displayed as tiles. By clicking a tile, you can bring the selected model to the foreground.
Toggle Editor
In order to open the active model in another editor:
- Click the Model or Table or Text button in the menu bar of the model.
The graphical editor ("Model") lets you design, modify and update models. The tabular editor ("Table") is ideal for the large-scale editing of attributes. The textual view ("Text") is especially useful to quickly understand the flow of tasks and decisions in a process.
View Object Tooltips
Object tooltips are small windows that display attribute information such as the Name and the Description of an object. They are displayed when you only have read access to a model.
To view an object tooltip:
- Position the mouse pointer over the object in the graphical editor.
The attributes which should be considered when viewing object tooltips can be configured in the Administration Toolkit.
Make Objects Coloured and Create Heat Maps
You can make objects in the graphical editor coloured depending on the value of an attribute to highlight some aspects of your data. This is a great way to create conditional formatting heat maps. For example, Control Objectives could be coloured red if there is a need for action, and gray if there is no need for action.
To start colouring:
- Click the More button in the menu bar of the open model, and then click Colour .
The colouring options appear at the right side of the program window. You can use these options to determine what the objects should look like in the model:
Enable Colouring
Click the Enable colouring button to enable colouring. All other options in this panel are inactive unless you click this button.
Select Element
Choose the object type you want to colour.
Select Attribute
Choose the attribute whose value determines how the objects in the chart will be coloured. Underneath, you will see all of the potential colours and how they are assigned to the attribute values.
Reverse Colours
To invert the colour scheme, click the Reverse colours button .
Change Colours
To change colours, click the colour circles.
Use Modes
In case of extensive, complex modelling methods it often happens that a single model type is used for several use cases. As a consequence, it will contain object and connector types that are only important for some or even one single application scenario.
To reduce complexity and at the same time enhance usability for the users, (view) modes can be predefined. In these view modes, unnecessary object and connector types are either greyed out or completely hidden.
Modes control the visibility of object and connector types in the following editors:
Graphical editor
Tabular editor
Model comparison
Available modes vary depending on the Application Library in use and product configuration.
Change Modes
Use the following options to change the active view mode:
Change Mode in Graphical Editor or during Model Comparison
To change the active mode in the graphical editor or during model comparison, proceed as follows:
- Click the button in the modelling bar, and then select a mode.
When a model is write protected, the modelling bar will not be displayed. You can still change the mode. Click the More button in the menu bar of the editor, point to Switch mode, and then select a mode.
Change Mode in Tabular Editor
To change the active mode in the tabular editor, proceed as follows:
- Click the Property filter button in the menu bar of the tabular editor, and then select a mode.
Optionally, when changing the mode in the tabulator editor, you may also:
Select a property filter.
In the Attribute Selection area, select the desired attributes. Only attributes that match the active property filter are listed.
Use Property Filters
When a property filter is active, unnecessary attributes are hidden. Depending on your system role(s) in ADONIS and the application scenario, you will get access to different property filters.
Example
A property filter for users with a simple reading role could e.g. reduce the amount of visible attributes in the Notebook of an object drastically. A property filter designed for a modeller, on the other hand, would filter no or only a few attributes from the same Notebook.
Property filters control the visibility of attributes in (the):
Tabular editor
Notebooks
Reports
Model comparison
Property filter settings will remain in effect until you switch to another scenario. The property filter settings will be saved in the background and reapplied when you switch back to the original application scenario.
Property filters can be configured in the ADONIS Administration Toolkit.
Change Property Filter
Use the following options to change the active property filter:
Change Property Filter in Tabular Editor or during Model Comparison
To change the active property filter in the tabulator editor or during model comparison, proceed as follows:
- Click the Property filter button in the menu bar of the editor, and then select a property filter.
Optionally, when changing the property filter in the tabulator editor, you may also:
Fine-tune which attributes are displayed. In the Attribute Selection area, select the desired attributes. Only attributes that match the active property filter are listed.
Select a mode.
Change Property Filter in Notebook
To change the active property filter in the Notebook, proceed as follows:
- Click the button at the top of the list of Notebook chapters, and then select a property filter.
Change Property Filter during Report Creation
You can change the active property filter in the report options.
Display or Hide Empty Attributes
To display or hide all attributes with no value in Notebooks in read mode:
- In read mode, click the button at the top of the list of Notebook chapters, and then select or clear the Hide empty attributes check box.
Whether this filter is enabled or disabled by default depends on the Application Library and product configuration. You can combine this filter with any property filter to control which attributes are visible in Notebooks in read mode.
Which Attributes are Considered "Empty"?
The following attributes are considered empty by the filter:
Empty text attributes
Reference attributes which do not contain a relation
Table attributes without any rows
Enumeration attributes, when the value "No entry" is set (if only one value can be selected) or when no value is set (if multiple values from the list can be selected at the same time)
Change Visible Model Area
The following sections provide an overview of functions for adjusting the focus and zoom value of the drawing area.
Scrolling
In some cases, a model in normal view will be larger than your screen. To adjust the model area, in other words, to scroll in ADONIS, follow these steps:
Drag the scroll bars at the right or bottom border of the model until you reach the desired model region.
To scroll up or down the display detail, use the mouse wheel.
Click the Pan icon in the Zoom tool, and then hold the left mouse button while you move the mouse pointer over the drawing area.
Press and hold the space bar and the left mouse button. Then move the mouse pointer over the drawing area.
Select Display Detail in the Drawing Area
In order to specify a concrete section of a model for displaying:
- Hold the right mouse button and drag the mouse pointer over the drawing area.
The necessary zoom factor is calculated automatically.
Zoom
With the zoom function, the scale factor of the active model on the screen can be changed from 1% through to 200%. 100% shows the model in original size.
The display size and the visible part of the drawing area in the workspace both depend on the zoom value. For new models, the zoom value is by default 100%.
You can set the zoom value in the Zoom tool:
Click the icons or to increase or decrease the zoom value to the next 10% (from 43% to 50%, from 70% to 60%…).
Click the icon to display the model in its original size (zoom value 100%).
Click the icon to fit the model to the window size.
In order to switch rapidly from “factor 100%” to “fit to window size” hold the right mouse button and click on the left mouse button consequently.
In order to change the zoom value using the mouse wheel hold the <Ctrl> key while scrolling the mouse wheel up/down.
Move Zoom Tool
The Zoom tool is a freely floating window. By default, the Zoom tool is located at the lower-right corner of the model window. To move the Zoom tool:
- Select the grey area at the top and drag the Zoom tool where you want it.
Use Snap Grid
The snap grid is a useful drawing aid for aligning objects and connectors. It is a uniform and unbroken grid covering the whole drawing area of a model. In order to access the snap grid options:
Click the More button in the menu bar of the open model.
Point to Grid , and then select the desired settings from the submenu.
Depending on your preferences you can:
Activate or deactivate the snap grid
Show or hide the snap grid
Change the snap grid settings
Collapse/Expand Model Header
If the model type has a model header configured, this header is shown above the open model. The model header contains basic information such as the name and description of the model.
To expand the model header:
- Click the button .
To collapse the model header:
- Click the button .