Use the Survey tab item view to display information about the contents of an individual item or a collection and to access related commands.
For some collections and some individual items, you can display additional information in an item view, which is displayed in a pane next to the tree when the Toolspace window is floating and beneath the tree when the Toolspace window is docked. To display the item view for a collection or an individual item in the tree, click the item name.
An item view can be a collection list view, properties list view, or graphical view, depending on the selected item.
If there are editable fields in the list view, the following icons are displayed:
Discards any edits made to the properties and reloads the properties from the relevant database.
Saves any edits made to the properties back to the relevant database.
Bold text in the survey item view indicates that there are unsaved changes made to data. Click to save the changes or to discard the changes and revert the data.
If you are using the extended properties feature, the LandXML elements as defined in the .sdx_def file that are relevant to networks are displayed. Click the cell in the Value column to assign an attribute.
If you are using the extended properties feature, and have created User-defined properties they are displayed. Click the cell in the Value column to assign an attribute.
A collection list view is a grid of rows and labeled columns displayed by the Toolspace trees for collection items. The list view can be displayed beneath or next to the Toolspace tree, depending on the state of the Toolspace window. The data displayed in the list view depends on the item selected in the tree.
A properties list view displays an editable view of the properties of the item selected, for example, and individual figure, control point, or setup.
A graphical view displays information about the selected item in a graphical (picture) form.
You can right-click in the graphical preview to display a context menu that allows you to manipulate the image using commands such as Pan and Zoom.