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We suggest opening another session of your Internet browser and loading an actual Geocortex map. This way, as you go through the tutorial you can practice what is being explained.
The main window is the Map Window. This is where the map is displayed. Beside it is the Information Panel, which displays information about the map and lets you work with map layers. Specifically, the Information Panel displays the legend, visible and active layers, and provides information about the map. At the top of the viewer you can see the Function Bar and the Toolbar. You will use the Function bar, the Toolbar, and the Expanded Toolkit to navigate around the map, ask questions of it, and otherwise interact with the information. Scale, active layer, and active tool information are all found below the map window. If you are feeling lost already... don't worry. Everything will be described in depth in the coming pages.
Suppose you want to go north (up the map). Take the Pan tool and grab (press and hold down the mouse button) onto the map pulling it down. Whatever part of the map you grab with the little hand will end up where you let go of the mouse button. Just like in real life. This works for moving any direction on the map. The magnifying glass with the little plus sign lets you 'zoom in', while the one with the little minus sign lets you 'zoom out'. There are a couple of ways to use these tools. First, click on one of them to select it, then go somewhere on the map and press the left mouse button. If it is the Zoom In tool the map zooms in. The center of the new map is wherever on the map you clicked the mouse button. The Zoom Out tool zooms out the same way. Second, you can zoom in more precisely by pressing the mouse button somewhere on the map, holding it down, and dragging a box. When you let go of the mouse button the new map extent will be the area defined by the box. When zooming out, the area defined by the box becomes the new map extent. Click here for a relevant, but not essential, discussion of scale.
Please note that the scale that appears on this viewer is for map navigation only, and is not necessarily accurate. Without information about the size of your monitor or display device, it is impossible for us to accurately provide a ratio scale. Error is most pronounced if you are operating a large monitor (or a projection device) running at a very low resolution, or if you are running a small monitor at a very high resolution. A 17" monitor running at a resolution of 800x600 or 1024x768 is much better represented by the denoted ratio scale. Some maps have limits on the scales at which you can view the data. As well, some layers and/or map labels may only appear at certain scales. We could go into it, but we'll spare you. Suffice to say, you listen to a stereo within a certain range. At a certain volume you can't hear the music any clearer if you make it louder, and at a certain quietness you can't hear it at all, no matter how much lower you turn the volume knob. There are a few other functions that make navigating around maps easier. Next, you will find out how to make a layer active.
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