InModeler Walkthrough

Figure 5: Loads panel and part of the overview tab Attributes As shown in figure 6, in the left toolbar, click on the attributes tab to open the Attributes panel. Click on the button or the attribute name to show all the labels of an attribute. Click on the button next to the label name to show its values. Figure 6: The Attributes panel is opened to the right of the left toolbar, and the attribute elements table is open to the right of the attributes panel, showing the data elements within each attribute. Facts Toolbar In the left menu, click on facts to open the Facts panel to show all created facts. Moving cursor over fact name and clicking on icon the new tab with fact properties is created. Creating a folder to organize your Facts and Attributes All objects in your Inzata project can be grouped into folders. The folder can contain different types of objects, such as attributes, metrics etc. The folder is usually used to associate all objects of one cluster or to logically organize objects such as “basic metrics”,“percentage metrics”, “date attributes” etc. A folder can be created in the list of any object, e.g. Attribute list, by clicking on the Add folder button at the bottom of the Attribute or Fact panels. From there, you can give the new folder a. There is also the option to save the new folder as a Global Folder. Saving it as a Global Folder will make the new folder appear in other modules of Inzata (InBoard, InViewer). If you do not save it as a Global Folder, the folder will only appear in the panel in InModeler. Click the Create button to finalize the and save the new folder, which is then added to the top of the Attribute and Fact panels as shown in figure 8. Figure 8: Create New Folder dialogue To add items to folders, drag any object (attribute or fact) into the folder and drop it on the folder name. The added object moves from the main object list and will now appear in the folder. Double click on the folder name for showing the folder properties as seen in figure 9. Overview (Overview Tab) Figure 1 (repeated): The InModeler Overview page. In figure 1, the colored boxes displayed horizontally along near the top of the webpage show the count for each aspect of a given Inzata project. Below that count bar, there are three windows: Logical Data Model (ldm tab) Figure 10: Logical Data Model tab This tab displays the logical data model of a project. The model (LDM) shows the relationships among attributes and facts as they are defined in the project’s metadata. The lower level (right side) of a cluster is represented by facts while the second level (middle) is represented by the primary keys of the clusters. The other attributes displayed on the highest level (left side) are related to the primary key that they are connected to by lines. The blue boxes denote facts and the green ones are attributes, the dark green-accented boxes are the primary keys in their respective clusters. Setting the cursor over the graphic symbol and then clicking will highlight an object’s relations. A user can click on a relation to keep it highlighted in a model (suitable when scrolling in larger LDM to follow the link between objects). Your model can be zoomed in or zoomed out using a mouse scroll bar or buttons in the tab at the bottom of the screen. The right side of your screen contains the Properties Type toolbar: Objects (objects tab) Figure 11: Objects (Data Dictionary) tab The objects page in figure 11 displays all the metrics, facts, and attributes in a given project, along with different characteristics of those objects. The different columns in order of left to right are:

InModeler Walkthrough

Figure 5: Loads panel and part of the overview tab Attributes As shown in figure 6, in the left toolbar, click on the attributes tab to open the Attributes panel. Click on the button or the attribute name to show all the labels of an attribute. Click on the button next to the label name to show its values. Figure 6: The Attributes panel is opened to the right of the left toolbar, and the attribute elements table is open to the right of the attributes panel, showing the data elements within each attribute. Facts Toolbar In the left menu, click on facts to open the Facts panel to show all created facts. Moving cursor over fact name and clicking on icon the new tab with fact properties is created. Creating a folder to organize your Facts and Attributes All objects in your Inzata project can be grouped into folders. The folder can contain different types of objects, such as attributes, metrics etc. The folder is usually used to associate all objects of one cluster or to logically organize objects such as “basic metrics”,“percentage metrics”, “date attributes” etc. A folder can be created in the list of any object, e.g. Attribute list, by clicking on the Add folder button at the bottom of the Attribute or Fact panels. From there, you can give the new folder a. There is also the option to save the new folder as a Global Folder. Saving it as a Global Folder will make the new folder appear in other modules of Inzata (InBoard, InViewer). If you do not save it as a Global Folder, the folder will only appear in the panel in InModeler. Click the Create button to finalize the and save the new folder, which is then added to the top of the Attribute and Fact panels as shown in figure 8. Figure 8: Create New Folder dialogue To add items to folders, drag any object (attribute or fact) into the folder and drop it on the folder name. The added object moves from the main object list and will now appear in the folder. Double click on the folder name for showing the folder properties as seen in figure 9. Overview (Overview Tab) Figure 1 (repeated): The InModeler Overview page. In figure 1, the colored boxes displayed horizontally along near the top of the webpage show the count for each aspect of a given Inzata project. Below that count bar, there are three windows: Logical Data Model (ldm tab) Figure 10: Logical Data Model tab This tab displays the logical data model of a project. The model (LDM) shows the relationships among attributes and facts as they are defined in the project’s metadata. The lower level (right side) of a cluster is represented by facts while the second level (middle) is represented by the primary keys of the clusters. The other attributes displayed on the highest level (left side) are related to the primary key that they are connected to by lines. The blue boxes denote facts and the green ones are attributes, the dark green-accented boxes are the primary keys in their respective clusters. Setting the cursor over the graphic symbol and then clicking will highlight an object’s relations. A user can click on a relation to keep it highlighted in a model (suitable when scrolling in larger LDM to follow the link between objects). Your model can be zoomed in or zoomed out using a mouse scroll bar or buttons in the tab at the bottom of the screen. The right side of your screen contains the Properties Type toolbar: Objects (objects tab) Figure 11: Objects (Data Dictionary) tab The objects page in figure 11 displays all the metrics, facts, and attributes in a given project, along with different characteristics of those objects. The different columns in order of left to right are:

InModeler Walkthrough

Figure 5: Loads panel and part of the overview tab Attributes As shown in figure 6, in the left toolbar, click on the attributes tab to open the Attributes panel. Click on the button or the attribute name to show all the labels of an attribute. Click on the button next to the label name to show its values. Figure 6: The Attributes panel is opened to the right of the left toolbar, and the attribute elements table is open to the right of the attributes panel, showing the data elements within each attribute. Facts Toolbar In the left menu, click on facts to open the Facts panel to show all created facts. Moving cursor over fact name and clicking on icon the new tab with fact properties is created. Creating a folder to organize your Facts and Attributes All objects in your Inzata project can be grouped into folders. The folder can contain different types of objects, such as attributes, metrics etc. The folder is usually used to associate all objects of one cluster or to logically organize objects such as “basic metrics”,“percentage metrics”, “date attributes” etc. A folder can be created in the list of any object, e.g. Attribute list, by clicking on the Add folder button at the bottom of the Attribute or Fact panels. From there, you can give the new folder a. There is also the option to save the new folder as a Global Folder. Saving it as a Global Folder will make the new folder appear in other modules of Inzata (InBoard, InViewer). If you do not save it as a Global Folder, the folder will only appear in the panel in InModeler. Click the Create button to finalize the and save the new folder, which is then added to the top of the Attribute and Fact panels as shown in figure 8. Figure 8: Create New Folder dialogue To add items to folders, drag any object (attribute or fact) into the folder and drop it on the folder name. The added object moves from the main object list and will now appear in the folder. Double click on the folder name for showing the folder properties as seen in figure 9. Overview (Overview Tab) Figure 1 (repeated): The InModeler Overview page. In figure 1, the colored boxes displayed horizontally along near the top of the webpage show the count for each aspect of a given Inzata project. Below that count bar, there are three windows: Logical Data Model (ldm tab) Figure 10: Logical Data Model tab This tab displays the logical data model of a project. The model (LDM) shows the relationships among attributes and facts as they are defined in the project’s metadata. The lower level (right side) of a cluster is represented by facts while the second level (middle) is represented by the primary keys of the clusters. The other attributes displayed on the highest level (left side) are related to the primary key that they are connected to by lines. The blue boxes denote facts and the green ones are attributes, the dark green-accented boxes are the primary keys in their respective clusters. Setting the cursor over the graphic symbol and then clicking will highlight an object’s relations. A user can click on a relation to keep it highlighted in a model (suitable when scrolling in larger LDM to follow the link between objects). Your model can be zoomed in or zoomed out using a mouse scroll bar or buttons in the tab at the bottom of the screen. The right side of your screen contains the Properties Type toolbar: Objects (objects tab) Figure 11: Objects (Data Dictionary) tab The objects page in figure 11 displays all the metrics, facts, and attributes in a given project, along with different characteristics of those objects. The different columns in order of left to right are: