Using the Process Analyst > Process Analyst for Operators > Using Cursor Labels

Using Cursor Labels

Each cursor has one cursor label for each pen displayed. The cursor label displays the value of the pen at the point where the cursor intersects with the pen data.

To display cursor labels:

This table summarizes how to use cursor labels:

Task

Description

Move a cursor label

Click the cursor label and drag the label to a new location.

Change the size of cursor labels

Click the cursor label you want to resize. Place the mouse cursor on one of the sizing boxes, and drag the label to the new size. If you drag the corner of the label, the label text resizes to an optimal size for the label.

Lock or unlock the cursor labels

Click the Lock/Unlock Cursor Labels. When on, this command causes cursor labels to be "frozen" in the position.

The cursor label displays the following information:

Cursor field

Applies to

Description

Pen Name

All Pen types

Displays the non-unique Process Analyst pen name

Value/Quality

All Pen types

Displays the value of the pen at the point the cursor intersects with the pen data

Date-Time Stamp

All Pen types

Displays the date/time stamp at the point the cursor intersects with the date/time axis.

Alarm Sample Comment

Alarms

Comment bound to an alarm sample.

The fields are displayed in the cursor label using the order defined above using the format specified for the vertical axis. For example, if your vertical axis format is "km/h", the label reads "<value> km/h".

The label displays the following values when the quality of the data is not good:

Cursor value

Description

NA

At the point of intersection the pen has no available data for display.

Gated

At the point of intersection the pen's data has been gated.

Disabled

At the point of intersection the alarm tag of the pen was disabled.

The label value can also contain a directional indicator that functions as follows:

Cursor value

Description

<value> ->

The cursor is to the left of the first available sample for this pen.

<- <value>

The cursor is to the right of the last available sample for this pen.