Using Side Bars

Using the Side Bars

Instant filtering query devices and tools

 

Side Bar Display

Whenever either Side Bar opens, there are three menus displayed at the top; the Devices drop-down menu, the Tools drop-down menu, and the right corner [X] to close the Side Bar. The first time the Side Bar opens, three configurable display options (Reports, Search All, and Exclusions) plus filter devices for all fields (columns) in the data set will be ticked and therefore visible on the Side Bar.

To configure or re-configure the Side Bar, click on the Devices drop-down menu on the upper left:

 

 

Except in a general Data Set page showing everything, you will probably not want filter devices for ALL the fields (columns) to be displayed on most pages. Some field values may not be relevant to the message or useful for selecting/filtering the displays on a given page. Use the Devices drop-down menu to Un-tick those fields to hide their filter devices. Use the drag hands at the right to move filter devices upwards or downwards to achieve the desired display on the Side Bar. You can also move the filter devices themselves into a new order by dragging and dropping them with the mouse upwards or downwards on the Side Bar.

The three configuration options at the top of the Devices list (Reports, Search All and Exclusions ) will be displayed on the Side Bar only if you leave them ticked. Otherwise, untick these boxes and Report Page tabs will display across the top of the Main Toolbar (the default), Exclusions (Move and Keep with history) will show on the Main Toolbar (without history), and Search All will be available in the Portal View, when open.

Note: Side Bar settings are specific to each Reports Page, and must be changed page-by-page inside Reports Mode. Side Bar settings established outside Reports Mode (always hit Escape to make sure you are not working in a specific Report tab) will apply outside Reports Mode. If you create one or more Report Pages, you can either keep your existing Side Bar settings the same or change them to suit each Report Page. . More on creating Reports Pages.

Using Side Bar features

If you leave all three display configuration options ticked, the top of your Side Bar will look something like this:

 

 

Displaying Exclusions on the Side Bar has the advantage that you can expand the Exclusions device and monitor the history of your Moves and Keeps (see image below). This is especially useful when you are recording a power query sequence of  Moves and  Keeps to send to someone else as a query file for use with their copy of the file (see below for more on query files).

Displaying Reports on the Side Bar is useful when there are very few, or when there are many Reports Pages that need to be arranged in groupings.

Like Search All above, any Side Bar text filter can be expanded to reveal a virtual keyboard for text search entry, with ANY and ALL multi-term search options. Omniscope text search works like a search engine, on one, several or all fields (columns)simultaneously. In any text filter, if you enter a single text string with no spaces, Omniscope will perform a prefix match, highlighting all records with text beginning with the search string. If you enter two text strings separated by a space and do not enclose them in "double quotes", you can search a field (column) of the data file for either one or both of the strings using the ANY or ALL search options. You can expand your search criteria to include values in other columns by simultaneously entering text strings in more that one filter device. To the right of each device you will see the hits in that column and at the top, in the barometer will show the combined record count.

Note: Omniscope does not yet support an EXACT match option, so searching for numbers and text can return records whose values are supersets of the search term, i.e. a search for '22 ' will also display 222, 223, etc. leaving you to select the final records manually.

Closing the Side Bar

Notice that whenever a query device is actively filtering the data set, the device panel colour turns orange:

 

 

Closing the Side Bar with filters set will prompt a message either to reset all the filters, or to convert the query settings to Exclusions. If you wish to keep the same record set in the IN Universe with the Side Bar closed, you must choose Convert to Exclusions, which means that the filter settings will be translated to the equivalent   Moves and  Keeps that you can manage directly in the open views without the Side Bar.

Side Bar Tools Menu

The Side Bar Tools drop down menu displays commands that affect the data and/or all other Side Bar query devices. The first three of these are especially useful when managing the creation of Report Pages and using them in live presentations.

Reset variables- Variables are input values not contained in a column of the data set that you can include in formula fields to facilitate dynamic modelling and sensitivity analysis. When you specify a Variable, you define a minimum, maximum and a default value in the range. Each variable defined in a file can display a Side Bar slider enabling users to change the assumed value. Clicking on Reset variables returns all variables to their default values. For more on defining and using variables, see Formulas & Variables.
Reset filters (query)- Clears all filter settings and returns all records to the IN universe...does the same as the Reset on the Main Toolbar.

Reset configuration (views & layout)- returns the current view to a 'pristine' state, with all views closed and the Side Bar reset to opening default settings. Usually used to recover from confusing combinations of views and layout when constructing Report Pages.

Clear colour-by- each device has a small colour-by icon in the upper left. Clicking the device icon imposes the colouring scheme for that field (column) on all the open views that use colouring, like the Table View, the Tree View, etc. This command removes all overriding colouring schemes that have been set in the Side Bar (but not those already specified in the individual View Toolbars)

Halo function: Also include records with the same value in: a powerful feature for managing groupings or clusters within a data set. Setting the Halo function changes filtering behaviour to include/maintain all records sharing a common value in the specified field (column). For more information, see Using the Halo function.

Expand all- expands all visible Side Bar devices

Collapse all- returns all Side Bar devices to their collapsed state (default on opening)

Add new variable- brings up the Add Variable wizard...see Formulas & Variables

Edit variables- brings up the Edit Variable wizard...see Formulas & Variables

Convert all to exclusions- Converts the current settings of all query/filter devices into Exclusions (the results of Moves and Keeps), thereby setting the green IN universe independently of Side Bar settings...allows Side Bar devices to be reset and/or hidden without changing the current composition of the data universes.

Import XML query file- XML query files exported from Omniscope by one user, say a business user identifying data quality issues with specific records (e.g. corrections or suspicious data) can be imported by another Omniscope user, say the Database Administrator, who wants to view just the records at issue and decide whether to parse the XML file to import the corrections into the source database.

Export XML query file- Exports the current query settings as an XML text file which other Omniscope users can open to recreate the same display, assuming they have the same .IOK file version open.

 

Right-click device menus

Right-clicking on any device displays a series of options for resetting/hiding the device, and changing the filter type. Changing the filter type is sometimes necessary to facilitate user interaction. In the example shown below, the field 'Node' is an integer number field, displaying as a range slider (the default) and with the 'Include empty (null) values' box ticked. If it was better to have users search for a specific number by typing it in, we could change the filter type to Text search...without changing the data type to Text.

 

 

Below the Filter Type command are a series of commands for managing each field. These commands are the same as those accessible from the Main Toolbar Edit > Manage Fields menu, and are discussed here.

 

Next: Using the Halo Function


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Halo Function

Using the Halo Function

Advanced filtering option

 

The Side Bar Tools menu includes an option to change filtering behaviour by activating the Halo function. This function changes filtering behaviour from the default to a modified form which preserves all records which share a specific value in a specified field in the IN universe, even if the value in the filters is not one of the selected values. 

 

 

 

The Halo function is activated from the Side Bar Tools > Halo function: Also include all records sharing the same value in....  option, by changing the common value field (column) from (None) to one of the fields in the data set. Once the Halo function is activated, a yellow caution triangle appears on top of the Side Bar telling you that filtering behaviour is now in Halo mode.

The Omniscope Halo function is a powerful analytical tool already used extensively with retail point-of-sale (POS) data. The example below is based on this file. The file contains POS data on 223,484 items purchased at a number of convenience store Units/POS positions over a month, in a wide range of categories. Items sharing the same UniqueTransaction number (first column text field) were bought at the same time. 

On the top of the Side Bar, the Halo function has been set to include all records sharing the same value in the Unique Transaction field. This means that filtering for a particular item will carry with it all the items that were bought at the same time. Notice the yellow caution triangle that has appeared on top of the Side Bar.

 

 

In this example file, the Halo function is used to select all items which were bought together with a particular promotional item (i.e. they have the same unique transaction number). In the example file, we filter the ProdName column to select the 'meal deal' promotion.  With the Halo function on, filtering on ProdName 'meal deal' returns not only the 'meal deal' transactions, but also all other 'haloed' items that share the same unique transaction numbers.  Use Add to Basket to place all the haloed records in the gold Basket universe, then switch to a Bar View of the Basket, select the actual 'meal deal' items and click Remove from Basket.  Now the Bar View of the gold Basket universe shows only only the 648 non- 'meal deal' items as ordered, stacked bars clearly showing which items were most complimentary with the 'meal deal' promotional item by value and by category for all outlets at all times of the day over the entire month. 

Try downloading the example file and repeating the analysis for specific days of the week, time slots or outlets.

Next: Cycling Options


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