Opening and Selecting Data

When defining a Session, you can select the data that you want to be opened.

A screenshot showing the open data options from the drop down.

Open data options

Buffer can be set to consider data in a region that is larger than the selection (see Scope and Buffer Regions). The buffer value is in dataset units.

The Run as multiple partitions option allows each region from several predefined regions to be run as independent sessions across the grid of engines (see Partitioning).

Enable Production Mode avoids saving the intermediate state of data between tasks. This saves disk space and improves performance, but disables the ability to rewind certain tasks and use the Session Data Viewer to visualise the session data. (See Production Mode.)

Note: The extent restriction defined here can be overridden at a task level using the Open Data Task. See Open Data Task for more.

All Data

By default, a session will be run on All Data. This means the session will apply to all data from all opened data sources (selected in Open Data tasks).

Bounding Box

The Bounding Box setting can be used to define a rectangular area of your data to be analysed. Processing will only apply to objects that lie partially or wholly within this region.

The co-ordinates of the area (MinX, MinY, MaxX, MaxY) are defined in dataset units.

One Predefined Region

You can define a single predefined region which is a polygon area of a dataset.

First select a Data Store to be opened, then define the following parameters:

  • Table - a table name that corresponds to a class
  • Where - a column name that corresponds to an attribute
  • equals - a value for the attribute

Several Predefined Regions

You can define multiple predefined areas that are multiple polygons in a dataset.

When a data store is opened, the classes where the predefined areas exist are selected according to the table name.

First select a Data Store to be opened, then use the Table parameter to enter a table name that corresponds to a class.

Polygon

Define a polygon extent as a Well Known Text (WKT) geometry, for example:

POLYGON ((30 10, 40 40, 20 40, 10 20, 30 10))

This must be in the same spatial reference system as the data.

Note: Multi polygons, polygons with holes, circles and polygons with arc segments are not supported.