How to ... Use the User Support System (USS)

Note that you can access the help documentation on a specific indicator by clicking on it and pressing F1. Or navigate through the menu above.


Help Items
How to Handle Boxes

How to Handle Boxes

1) Box types and their handling

The 'All Indicators' view of USS is designed as a hierarchical system of boxes. A box may contain other boxes or an indicator. The four main boxes are all boxes containing boxes.

A box may be opened by double clicking or selecting 'open' from the right click menu. Alternatively, 'open all' from the right-click menu will open the box and all its underlying boxes. This may demand some processing power from your computer!

Note that the right click menu items are context depending. Right click on the graph itself results in other options then right click on the border of the graph.

2) Indicator types

An indicator may be represented in a graph, chart or in a map.

A cream-colored box contains a graph or chart, a blue box contains a map.

3) Popup menu for a closed indicator box

Only the options in the upper part of the popup menu are used for handling boxes.

4) Popup menu for an open indicator box

5) Popup menu for a box containing boxes

Compared to the menu of indicator boxes, this menu has two additional options in the upper part:

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How to manipulate filled & line graphs

A graph is composed of a graph area and a border area. The right border shows the dimensions and classes of this particular indicator. The left border shows the unit and its range. The lower border shows the time axis. From the edit menu or the top menu icons several dialogs can be opened to manipulate graphs.

2) The Edit menu

The Edit menu contains the folowing options (also available as icon):

3) The Widget Dialog

The Widget Dialog displays the indicator definition and its representation.

The representation type 'Graph' may be changed into a bar or pie chart (see help item 'Bar and pie graphs').

Each representation type has several subtypes.

4) The Filled Graph

This shows the representation type 'Graph' and subtype 'Filled'.

5) The Dimension Dialog

The Dimension Dialog displays the dimensions and their classes. Indicators may be defined over one or more dimensions.

Only one of these dimensions may have the box 'single' unchecked!

6) Dimension and classes selection

A dimension has a name followed by a selection type in parentheses.

Changing the selection of 'Regions (t)', for instance, will affect the classes selection of all indicators with the same dimension identifier!

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How to manipulate bar and pie charts

1) Open the Widget Dialog

Many USS indicators have multiple dimensions. Transformation to a different chart type and the inclusion of time animation may enable a more detailed view on the data.

To this end, select the Widget Dialog from the edit menu

2) Transformation to different chart type

In the Widget Dialog, you can select the type of chart you would like to display the data in, as well as the substype and the dimension.

Note: changing these settings will also alter the settings in the Dimension Dialog. If you are experiencing trouble with returning to your initial settings, most likely this is because the settings in the Dimension Dialog have changed as well. Specifically, the 'single' checkbox may have become checked.

3) Adjusting the Range

The Range Dialog allows you to adjust the Y-axis in two ways:

4) Time animation

The Time Manager is a tool for time animation (also available as Icon).
The current year is displayed in the title and as Time value in the Time control.

5) Time animation details

Animation speed, minimum and maximum year of the animation can be set in the details section (the >> button) of the Time Control.

6) Transformation to pie chart

Use a pie chart to focus on the distribution over the classes. Time animation shows you the dynamics in the distribution.

Creating a pie chart is analogous to creating a bar chart. Select the desired dimension in the Widget Dialog and set the SINGLE option = off.

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How to manipulate maps

Map indicators display data on a 0.5 by 0.5 degree world grid.

Data may be represented as a color range (for such ranges as millimeters per day) or as qualifiers (for such ranges as 'Land-cover types').

Time animation makes it possible to view the evolution of the current scenario over time up to the year 2100.

1) Time animation

The Time Manager is a tool for time animation. It can be accessed under the tools menu, by pressing Ctrl+T, or by clivcking the Time Manager symbol in the toolbar.

Animation speed, minimum and maximum year of the animation can be set in the details section of the Time Control (under the >> button on the control).

2) Out of range values

Grids with values beyond the color range will be displayed in black.

You can adjust the range using the Range Dialog. (from the Edit menu or the menubar.)

3) The Range Dialog

The Range Dialog lets you adjust the range in two ways:

4) Zoom in on region

The right mouse click in the map area will bring a regions popup to the front. You can choose between 12 regions to zoom in, or the world to zoom out again.

5) Adjusted range

You can adjust the range manually with the Range Dialog to get a better picture of the differences in a zoomed region.

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How to load scenarios

USS includes several scenarios. For a description of these different scenarios, see the scenarios section.

When you start USS, one scenario is loaded by default. You can load the other scenarios and select the one you are interested in.

1) Open Scenario Manager

From the 'tools' menu, select 'Scenario Manager'.

A dialog with the following options pops up:

2) Load a scenario

Window 'Load Scenario' pops up with a list of all available scenarios. You can select a scenario to load and effectuate it with the OK button. This scenario becomes the active scenario.

3) Scenarios loaded

Now you can switch between scenarios by clicking on the Select button. Note that you have to highlight the scenario, then press the 'Select' and 'OK' buttons in order to select the scenario.

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How to compare scenarios in graphs

1) Select Indicator

It is possible to compare different scenarios for one indicator in the same graph. To this end, zoom in on the indicator you want to compare.

2) Load Scenarios

Load the scenarios you want to compare with the Scenario Manager ,(see How to load scenarios).

3) Open the Dimension Dialog

Access the Dimension Dialog under the edit menu. With this, you can control the different dimensions of an indicator displayed in the graph.

Every graph indicator has a scenario dimension apart from his own dimensions. Most indicators are defined over one or more dimensions, e.g. region dimension. For all own dimensions (selected from the pull down menu) 'single' should be checked.

Select Scenario... from the pulldown menu in the dimension dialog and uncheck 'single'. Now you can select the different scenarios you want to compare by highlighting them or pressing the 'All' button.

4) Comparable scenarios

All loaded scenarios are displayed on the indicator graphs. You can compare the scenarios of each indicator.

5) Reset

When finished, restore the original setting of the dimensions and their selected classes. Otherwise the display of other indicators may become disturbed.

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How to compare scenarios in a splitview

1) Map indicator

The split window function allows you to compare scenarios of an indicator by displaying two or more windows, each loaded with a different scenario.

The Window menu on the menubar contains the options:

2) Split window

You can split a window as often as you need to. Each window acts independently and offers you a copy of the USS. You can open another indicator or select another scenario for the same indicator in the new window.

3) Rearranged windows

You can rearrange the windows by dragging the borderline. The Tile option on the window menu resets the windows.

4) Load scenarios

Each window may be linked to another scenario, allowing you to make comparisons (see How to load scenarios).

5) Ready to compare

The Time Manager allows you to explore the differences of map indicators for the selected scenarios (see How to manipulate maps)

6) Synchronized time animation

Use the Time Manager to play the animation. Animation is synchronic for every window.

7) End year of scenarios

After you play the animation, USS shows you the end-year data of this indicator for the selected scenarios.

8) Join the views

When you have finished comparing, you will need to return to one window again. Split windows may be joined back to one by selecting the 'Join' option from the window menu.

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How to view Documentation

Launching USS-Help

USS is connected with the documentation in the help-browser. After Launching USS, pressing F1 will launch the help-browser. The default home page is the help topic of the box that was selected in the viewer while pressing F1. The help menu is also accessable from the menu bar (help->model)

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How to export data to Excel

1) Installation of the macros

You can export the data of an indicator to a file and import this data into Excel with the 2 supplied macros, which are included in this package. These macros are installed automatically in Excel with the installation of the USS as the 'IMAGE tools' toolbar.

You will need to accept macro enabling (if asked for). If installation fails for whatever reason, you can find the tools under program files -> IMAGE 2.4 USS -> utility -> exceltools.xls. You need to launch this Excel file once and close it right after. This will create the IMAGE toolbar in your menubar. After that the macros will be available any time you use Excel.

2) Popup menu with Save option

A popup menu will appear by right-clicking in the border area of a graph. This popup menu contains a Save option that lets you write the data to a file.

3) Macros

Ope Excel. On the menubar of Excel you'll find the IMAGEtools toolbar with two buttons:

Data will be imported on a new blank sheet.

4) Import to long format

Long format means that every row will contain one data item and its identifying dimension classes after import.

Remark: Excel has a maximum of 65536 rows on a sheet. The data of some multi-dimensional indicators exceed this maximum and import will fail!

5) Imported data

The first line is a documentation line from USS and contains the internal name and definition, unit and the graph label.The second line is the M header followed by a blank and the excel data table. All classes receive a value during import. The data table is suitable for the Excel Pivot table Report function.

6) Pivot Table Report

With the Pivot Table Report function you can arrange the data in every possible way. After you have created a Pivot Table it's very easy to make a graph. Just activate the graph button from excel, select a graph type and that's it.

7) Import to matrix format

After opening the datafile the data is presented in a matrix format on a new sheet. The last dimension is used to create the columns of the matrix. A matrix is a more readable presentation of data. However it's not suitable for the Pivot Table Report function.

Remark: Data import, which will fail in long format due to exceeding the maximum number of rows, may succeed in this format.

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How to export maps

Converting an IMAGE map file into an ascii-Grid file, which can be read by GIS software requires the following steps:

  1. Find the data
  2. Find out the name of a IMAGE map
  3. Convert the file(s) with the included application 'm2gis'

1) How to find the data

Data are organised per scenario. The folder data contains the scenario subfolders (i.e. B1, B2, A2, etc.). Each scenario-folder contains a map folder with all the mapfiles of that scenario.

2) How to determine the name of a particular IMAGE map

For example: in case of the landcover map the widget property is:
integer GLCTb[66663](t)
The filename of the map is the Uppercase string GLCT

3) How to convert a map file from IMAGE 2.4 SRES scenarios with m2gis.exe

This application converts the binary map files of the IMAGE USS into ascii-Grid files, which can be read by GIS software. The ascii-Grid file consists of a map header and 720 by 360 values including NODATA values, which are represented by -9999.

You can select one file or all the files in a directory to convert. The default option is converting one file.

An IMAGE map-file is composed of data about multiple years (usually 5) and in some cases also about an extra dimension (i.e. crop type). Conversion results in a ascii-Grid file per year per dimension (if applicable). The files will be stored in the selected outputdirectory and will be named: <filename>_<year>[_<dimension number>].asc

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