VIEW menu
This menu primarily controls the appearance of standard plot windows, but it also impacts other functions.  Generally these choices have no effect on calculations or data, although the position of certain markers can affect some data manipulations (i.e., automatically finding baselines). .

  •   MARKERS      This submenu has three (sometimes four) items:

  •   SHOW MARKERS / HIDE MARKERS     Toggles the display of markers in the plot area (if the screen is large enough, there is button for this in the upper right corner of the plot area).

  •    INSERT MARKER(S)        Lets you insert additional markers into a file (beyond those entered when the data were acquired in LabHelper).  A window opens asking you to pick the letter of the new marker. Having done that, you move the cursor to the plot area and click on the location where you want to put the new marker.

    The "»" and "<<" buttons are for the standard interpolation markers; "»" indicates the start of a segment of interpolated data and "<<" marks the end of the segment. These may be used to avoid including interpolated data in many analysis operations. Interpolation markers are (optionally) set automatically by the 'REMOVE REFERENCES' and 'SPIKE REMOVAL' procedures in the EDIT menu, but you may occasionally need to insert them manually.

    When done (or when you want to change the marker letter), go back to the 'Insert new marker' window.

  •    REMOVE MARKERS IN BLOCK        Eliminates all markers from within a selected block.

  •    EXPORT MARKERS        Makes a .csv text file contining all of the file's markers, with the associated sample number, elapsed time, and real time.   Standard marker characters (R, S, ¶, », «) are labeled with their associated event type (e.g., begin and end reference, begin and end interpolation, etc.).

  •    SHOW REAL-TIME NOTES      If the data file contains any real-time notes (Warthog binary or Sable ExpeData files only), this will output them to a text file.
  •   GRIDS AND SEGMENTS   This option has a submenu with four selections that control the display of dotted lines in plot windows, zero lines, screen segment indicators (the latter is only applicable if the file has more cases than the number of horizontal pixels in the plot window), and time segment indicators.  Note that for very large files, the screen segment indicators are switched off for clarity, but you can switch them back on from this menu.   Also, you can show screen segments or time segments (or neither), but (to avoid screen clutter) not both.
         Note: many of these changes do not take effect until a new channel is drawn.

    SHOW GRID LINES     Toggles the display of horizontal grid lines in the plot area.

    SHOW ZERO LINES     Toggles the display of a horizontal line showing the value of zero in the plot area (if the data include zero).

    SHOW REAL-TIME INDICES (hours; days)     Toggles the display of vertical lines showing the time of day in hours, or for very long-duration files, the day (time or day indices are always shown just below the plot area).

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  •   SCALING [ACTIVE CHANNEL]   This submenu has five items:

  •   HIGH RESOLUTION     Automatically finds the Y-range of the data and selects Y-axis scaling equal to the total range plus 5% in either direction.

  •    SCALE TO INCLUDE ZERO        Selects a range that includes zero and the entire Y-range of data, and sets the tic marks at whole numbers or simple fractions.  If the data are all positive or all negative, the scale will be set to include at least 110% of the data range, using zero as the minimum or maximum Y value, respectively.

      • If data include both positive and negative values, this is equivalent to 'NORMAL SCALING'. 

  •    NORMAL SCALING        LabAnalyst's default scaling protocol.  Selects a Y-axis scaling factor that includes the entire Y-range of the data, with tic marks set at whole numbers or simple fractions.  If data include both positive and negative values, this is equal to 'SCALE TO ZERO'.  If data are all positive or all negative, 'NORMAL SCALING' may select a smaller scale factor (i.e., higher resolution).

  •   MANUAL SCALING...      Allows manual selection of minimum and maximum Y-values for the plot area.  This is useful to optimize scaling for plot regions of particular interest.  On may occasions, the automatic scaling options (NORMAL SCALING and SCALE TO ZERO) do not show areas of particular interest at sufficiently high resolution.

    When the manual scaling window (shown at right) opens, it displays the current scaling values for the active channel.  You can modify them as desired.

  •   SET INTERACTIVELY...      Lets you use the mouse and cursor in the plot area to set
    the scaling limits, using this small window:

    • Click the 'Upper limit' or 'Lower limit' button, then move the cursor line to the desired spot and click the mouse once.  You can also expand a plot with a too-confining scale by clicking the 'Expand 2X' or 'Expand 3X' buttons.  When done, click the 'done' or 'cancel' buttons.  Clicking the plot area when the horizontal cursor line is not showing is the same as clicking the 'done' button.

    When using manual or interactive scaling, it's important to remember that the SAME scaling constraints will apply to all segments of the channel -- regardless of what data they contain.  Manual scaling is switched off (and Normal scaling is switched on) whenever a new file is loaded.
  • When you perform a baseline correction on a manually-scaled channel (either 'regular' manual scaling or interactive scaling), scaling is automatically reset to 'HIGH RESOLUTION' mode.  This is because the baseline operation changes the position of the data, so manually-set limits are frequently completely outside the data range after baseline correction.
  •   SCALING [ALL CHANNELS]       This has a submenu with three items:

  •    HIGH RESOLUTION
  •   SCALE TO INCLUDE ZERO
  •    NORMAL SCALING       ⌘N
    These have the same action as described above, except that they reset the scaling defaults for all channels (not just the active channel).

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  •    ZOOM IN       ⌘+      If you have selected a block, you can 'zoom in' on that part of the file, enlarging it until it fills the plot area.   This is useful for looking carefully at areas of interest.   There is no limit on how big or how small a zoomed block can be.   Can also be activated with the '+' key alone.

  •    ZOOM OUT       ⌘-      If you have a zoomed block, this returns the plot area view to 'entire file' mode (i.e., all of the data are plotted).  Note that the initial block selection used to zoom the file is lost when you zoom out.   Can also be activated with the '-' key alone.

  •    REDRAW            Redraws the plot area, which is useful if it has been messed up from previous operations, or if a new channel has been selected.  Any data block is retained when the plot is redrawn.   This should not be necessary very often.

  •    OVERLAY...    ⌘L          Allows you to draw other channels in the plot area in addition to the active channel.  Note that Overlay is not available in multi-channel display mode.

    A channel selection window appears in the lower left (the button for the active channel is switched off).  Select any or all of the available channels, then click the'custom' or 'Done' button.

    If you clicked the 'custom button, you can select two additional options (if you clicked 'done', the program defaults to dashed lines and overlay on all subsequent plots).

    • Whether the overlay appears only on the present plot area, or whether all subsequent plot areas (different channels or different screenfulls) also show overlays.  To switch this option off, go to overlay selection again. 
    • Whether the lines for overlain channels are drawn as dashes or as solids. 

    After you click the 'selection OK' button, data about the selected channels are drawn in colors corresponding to the color code in the lower left window, and the overlay operation itself begins in the plot area.

    • All channels are drawn in black in monochrome mode, which may make identification of different channels difficult.

    An easy way to do a simple overlay (one channel only, no options for dashed lines or subsequent plotting) is to hold down the 'option' key and selecting the desired channel from the main keyboard number keys (not the keypad).  This only works for channels 1-10, however (key 0 = channel 10).

  •   CLEAR OVERLAY    This removes any overlay traces and redraws the plot area

  •   COMMENTS      This submenu has two items:

  •   SHOW COMMENTS    Toggles display of the file's comments in a small window.  If you click on this window, another window opens to allow editing of the comments.  Comments can be essentially unlimited in length (32 K of characters), but you'll only see the top few lines in the comments window.

  •   Show block instructions    Toggles display of instructions for selecting blocks and switching screen views (normally shown in the lower right of the display, but it can be removed with this command if it gets annoying).
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  •   MULTIPLE CHANNELS...          Allows you to plot any combination of the channels in the file.  There are two 'modes' of channel display: Full Screen and Plot Area.

    • In Full Screen mode, the data plots fill up the entire available screen area.  You can change between the 'entire file' and 'active screen' modes and shift between screens using the normal channel change buttons or the left and right arrow keys.  Also, a small floating window at the right of the plot area indicates the active channel and lets you change active channels through button clicks.  The other channel-change options continue to work.You can also send an image of the file to a printer or load new files, but most analyses and edit menu functions are not usable.  You need to click the close box to get back to the regular analysis screen.

    • In Plot Area mode, the channels are plotted within the normal plot area and you can use all the normal edit and analysis menu functions. 

    Clicking the 'Use Standard Multichan Settings' button tells the program to plot all channels in the file at normal (equal) plot spacing, with no further questions.   If you click the 'Next..'. button, a channel selection window allows you to pick any combination of the available channels.  If you click the 'non-standard plot spacing' button, a window will open to allow customization of the height of each channel:

    The window for customized plotting contains a diagram of the printed page.  You select the relative height of each channel in sequence by moving the cursor on the diagram to the desired height, and then clicking the mouse ONCE.  The channels will be redrawn one by one as their heights are selected.  Note that there is a fixed amount of room on the screen, so that enlarging one channel requires shrinking one or more of the others.  Consequently, the computer reserves an amount of space necessary for drawing the remaining channels at the minimum possible height (and will not let you exceed that limit).  You must select plot heights for all the channels.  When done, you can accept the results, re-do the plot height selection, or revert to the normal setting (all channels drawn with equal heights).

    When done, click the 'Plot heights OK' button, and the selected channels will be drawn.

    Example of a multi-channel display with 5 channels out of 6 shown.  These channels are plotted in normal scaling mode.

    • NOTE:  if the file contains only one channel, the menu reads FULL SCREEN instead of MULTIPLE CHANNELS.

  •    SINGLE CHANNEL     Shifts back to single channel display.  Note that some operations (like exiting from a full-screen multi-channel display) automatically switch to single channel display.   Overlay works in this viewing mode.

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  • PLOT STYLES   This window lets you select the foreground (i.e., data), background, label, marker, and grid colors for both the plot windows and the block window.  The default colors are 'standard dark:'   a dark background, yellow data line, and pale blue or white grids; there is also a 'standard' set of pale colors in which the plot background is light gray and the data line is red.   For both standard colorsets, the selected block is shown as dark blue with yellow data.  If you prefer other color combinations, you can use the standard Apple color picker to select the colors of all the major plot elements.  Note that the program will use default colors for overlays, but these can also be user-set. 

    Some considerations:

    • Whatever colors you select for data lines and backgrounds, be sure to check them for proper visibility of plot elements when 'inverted,' as when a subset of the plot or block areas is selected or highlighted (this is shown for both plot and block areas).
    • The Histogram bars button allows selection of the bar colors of histograms, which are used in various analysis modes.
    • NOTE:   Colors may change if you shift between 8-bit color depth (256 colors) and greater color depths (16- and 24-bit; 'thousands' or 'millions' of colors). Modern Macs operate with 'millions' of colors.

    User preferences are saved for automatic loading a program launch when you click the 'Save These Settings' button. 

  •   SHOW ALL CHANNEL VALUES...     Provides a continuous numeric readout of all data channels, or a user-selected subset of them.  As for the data bar, values are updated only when the cursor is within the plot area.  You can either place the readout box with the cursor or use the default placement (directly under the value readout of the data bar).   As for the data bar, values are updated only when the cursor is within the plot area.

  •   SHOW ANY ON-LINE NOTES...      Opens a window that shows all of the on-line notes contained within the data file (these can be saved to a .pdf with the Print button).

  •    SIGNIFICANT DIGITS     

    You can choose to show from four to eight significant digits when the program presents the results of analyses.  The default value is six, which is a reasonable approximation of the resolution and accuracy of most data.  Not all of the numbers shown in analysis windows conform to the user-set number of significant digits (for example, many mean values are shown with more digits).

    The significant figures setting affects only the display of results.  It does not influence the precision of data storage or of internal mathematical calculations.

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