This page (revision-57) was last changed on 07-Dec-2016 14:14 by David R Williams

This page was created on 09-Jul-2008 07:16 by David R Williams

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At line 38 changed 2 lines
%%information
One of the nice things about EIS is that you can recycle a study already designed by someone else for a similar — or even different — purpose, without having to go through this design step.%%
%%information One of the nice things about EIS is that you can recycle a study already designed by someone else for a similar — or even different — purpose, without having to go through this design step.%%
At line 53 changed one line
Below the Study Description panel, you can search on one or more fields, namely ''Acronym'' (the name of the study), ''Title'' (confusingly, a description of the study), or ''Author'' (self-explanatory). Since I've mentioned George Doschek, let's try a search for studies he's designed:
Below the Study Description panel, you can search on one or more fields, namely ''Acronym'' (the name of the study), ''Title'' (confusingly, a description of the study), or ''Author'' (self-explanatory). Since I've mentioned George Doschek, let's try a search for studies he's designed. I don't know any other Doscheks on the EIS team, so I'll just use his surname:
At line 56 changed one line
You can see that this results in four studies showing up.
You can see that this results in four studies showing up, each of which was authored by someone called Doschek.
You can clear the search fields by clicking ''Clear'' on the right-hand side.
Changing the ''Study Type'' drop-down list on the right from ''Science & Engineering'' to ''Science'' excludes all engineering-type studies from our search (although this tends to be more useful when looking for specifice engineerings studies hidden amongst the forest of science studies).
!Raster panel
Below the search area is the ''Raster'' panel, where you can start to look at the details of the study's execution.
%%information Note that since engineering studies are created by hand, rather than through the planning tool, it's not possible to view their contents (such as number of exposures, or exposure time) in the Raster panel.