This does not uncode the data, it simply adds more coding to the File in the Project.Detail View: Select the text in a Node > Drag it to the List View to another Node.It will show as coded text in the Node next time you open it.įigure 3.10 Viewing narrow coding context in a Node
If seeing it as temporary context is insufficient and you want to retain some or all of the context around the coded portion, then select and code text in your usual way (e.g., drag and drop the additional context into the Node).You might need to go to the bottom of the Detail View and drag up to select everything.On your keyboard select Cmd + A to select all of the References and then expand the Coding Context of all simultaneously by following the steps above.Custom allows you to choose a number of words on either side.Broad provides the context of the entire paragraph.List View: Double-click on one of your Nodes so it opens > Highlight a portion of a Reference (or multiple references) Right-click > Coding Context > Narrow (to get 5 words on either side as in Figure 3.10).Right-click on a stripe to Uncode (and see additional options).To turn the Highlight off go to the Ribbon: View > Highlight > None.Single-click (not twice) on any stripe to turn on Highlighting for that Node in the File.Ribbon: View > Coding Stripes > Number of stripes (up to 200) > OK.To modify the default of seeing only seven Coding Stripes.The darker the stripe the more Nodes you have applied.With your cursor/pointer, hover over the vertical black/grey/white Coding Density stripe to the right of your text to see the associated Nodes (Figure 3.9).Ribbon: View > Coding Stripes > Use Item Colours.Turning on the colours you assigned to the Nodes (if you did!) As you scroll up or down with the Scroll Bar (between the text and the stripes), you see the stripes are anchored adjacent to the text you coded (Figure 3.9).įigure 3.9 Viewing Coding Stripes in a File.Ribbon: View > Coding Stripes > Nodes Recently Coding.