Autodesk 15606-011408-9005 Tutorial - Page 276

Exercise 4: Add a property, To examine the attribute data

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To examine the attribute data 1 In the Task pane, switch to the Display Manager tab, select the Waterlines layer and click Table. NOTE In this example, the Data Table was undocked by dragging it away from the edge of the window. The general properties and the object data specific to Waterlines appear in the Data Table. 2 In the Data Table, examine the properties for the Waterlines layer. The .COLOR properties have been translated to a new Size property. 3 Close the Data Table. To continue this tutorial, go to Exercise 4: Add a property (page 268). Exercise 4: Add a property A set of feature classes and their properties is called a schema. The schema can have properties that are constrained (page 309). The constraints determine which objects you can add to a particular feature class. For example, to be added to the Roads feature class, an object must be a line. Properties are like 268 | Chapter 7 Tutorial: Managing Data From Different Sources

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To examine the attribute data
1
In the Task pane, switch to the Display Manager tab, select the Waterlines
layer and click Table.
NOTE
In this example, the Data Table was undocked by dragging it away
from the edge of the window.
The general properties and the object data specific to Waterlines appear in the Data
Table.
2
In the Data Table, examine the properties for the Waterlines layer.
The .COLOR properties have been translated to a new Size property.
3
Close the Data Table.
To continue this tutorial, go to
Exercise 4: Add a property
(page 268).
Exercise 4: Add a property
A set of feature classes and their properties is called a schema. The schema
can have properties that are
constrained
(page 309)
. The constraints determine
which objects you can add to a particular feature class. For example, to be
added to the Roads feature class, an object must be a line. Properties are like
268
| Chapter 7
Tutorial: Managing Data From Different Sources