PI Vision User Guide
PI Vision User Guide
User Guide
OSIsoft, LLC
1600 Alvarado Street
San Leandro, CA 94577 USA
Web: https://www.osisoft.com
Getting started.......................................................................................................... 9
Home page..................................................................................................................................................... 9
Folders.......................................................................................................................................................10
View a specific group of displays................................................................................................................ 14
Search for an existing display.....................................................................................................................14
Create a new display.................................................................................................................................. 15
Display settings and permissions............................................................................................................... 15
Organize displays with labels..................................................................................................................... 18
Mark a display as a favorite........................................................................................................................ 19
Basic tasks..................................................................................................................................................... 19
Display workspace......................................................................................................................................... 21
Save displays................................................................................................................................................. 23
Open a PI ProcessBook display......................................................................................................................24
• Unit of measure
Ability to switch units of measure (UOM) on a data item and symbol basis. Display builders
are able to view AF attributes and asset-based AVEVA PI Vision calculations values in the
UOM that is most applicable to their users in their region.
• PI Vision Extensibility
Resources for getting started with PI Vision Extensibility can be found on OSIsoft'sGitHub
page (https://github.com/osisoft/OSI-Samples-PI-System/tree/main/docs/PI-Vision-
Extensibility-Docs). Here you can find the PI Vision Extensibility reference guide as well as a
sample custom symbol.
AVEVA PI Vision is an intuitive, web-based application that enables you to retrieve, monitor,
and analyze process engineering information to provide a deep level of operational
intelligence.
With AVEVA PI Vision, you can:
• Visualize PI data as symbols, such as trends, tables, values, gauges, and XY plots.
• Search for PI data on desktop or mobile platforms.
• Create a symbol collection.
• Configure multi-state symbols to create visual alarms for critical process states.
• Design, format, and save displays for easy retrieval and further analysis.
• Create ad hoc displays.
• Analyze and compare events.
• Monitor process data in displays.
• Share displays with other members of a group or anyone with access to AVEVA PI Vision.
• View PI ProcessBook displays.
Note:
For information about installing and administering AVEVA PI Vision, see the AVEVA PI
Vision Installation and Administration Guide (https://docs.osisoft.com/bundle/pi-
vision/page/pi-vision-installation-and-administration-guide.html) or download the PDF
version from the OSIsoft Customer Portal (https://my.osisoft.com/).
System requirements
Most current browsers on a wide variety of computers and devices support AVEVA PI Vision,
including tablets and phones running iOS or Android operating systems.
To start using AVEVA PI Vision, navigate to the AVEVA PI Vision application server that was set
up by your administrator. By default installation, the address is: https://webServer/
PIVision where webServer is the name of the AVEVA PI Vision web server.
Based on the size of your device or browser window, AVEVA PI Vision attempts to provide the
best possible viewing experience. So, for example, if you are using AVEVA PI Vision on a small
device (that is, smaller than an iPad mini), you are redirected to the AVEVA PI Vision mobile
website https://webServer/PIVision/m.
Note:
The AVEVA PI Vision mobile website allows you to view recently accessed displays and
data items. You can also use the search function to find other displays and data items.
However, you cannot create or update displays while using the mobile website.
To get the most from AVEVA PI Vision, OSIsoft recommends that you use PI Asset Framework
(PI AF) to organize your PI System data. PI AF provides a consistent representation of your
assets using asset-centric hierarchies and templates and allows you to extract maximum value
from your operational data.
With PI AF, you can use the following AVEVA PI Vision features:
For more information about PI AF, visit the OSIsoft Customer Portal (https://my.osisoft.com/)
for the PI Asset Framework (PI AF) Overview.
Note:
AVEVA PI Vision uses cookies which could have legal implications based on Licensee's
geographic location. Please consult with your legal department to make sure you are
compliant with relevant laws and rules and regulations, including, but not limited to, data
protection and cookie directives.
Keyboard shortcuts
AVEVA PI Vision lets you use a number of keyboard shortcuts to accomplish your tasks faster.
Here is a list of common commands:
Press To Do This
CTRL + C Copy an object
CTRL + V Paste an object
CTRL + X Cut an object
DELETE or BACKSPACE Delete an object
Arrow keys Move an object
CTRL + Click Select multiple objects
CTRL + A Select all objects
SHIFT + Drag Resize an object while maintaining its proportions
CTRL + Z Undo an action
CTRL + Y Redo an action
CTRL + S Save a display
designed to optimize touch experience when using a 2-in-1 hybrid device. When you toggle the
Touch mode switch on, data items in the Assets and Attributes panes will show gripper handles
and you will be able to scroll both panes with your finger. To toggle the Touch
mode off, tap the Touch mode switch again.
Note:
If you have a computer with a touch sensitive screen and the touch mode button is not
visible, you may need to enable it in the advanced flag settings of your browser. First,
close all browser instances. Locate Chrome or Edge in the Start menu. Right-click the
application and then click Open File Location. Within the File Explorer window, right-
click the browser shortcut and then click Properties. In the Target field, add "--touch-
events" after the full path to the executable. For example, the new target field for Chrome
might be: "C:\Program Files\Google\Chrome\Application\chrome.exe" --
touch-events. Click Ok and then double-click the shortcut to enable touch events.
On any touch-sensitive device, you can use the following touch gestures when working in
AVEVA PI Vision.
To Do This. . . Gesture
Drag a data item from search results Tap and hold the data item's gripper handle and slide your
to the display. finger towards the display area.
Resize a symbol, image, shape, or text. In Design mode, tap and hold the sizing handle and slide it to
resize the object.
Add a trend cursor. Exit Design mode and tap anywhere on a trace.
Zoom in and out on a trend. Exit Design mode and pinch two fingers together to zoom out.
Stretch two fingers apart to zoom in. The start time, end time,
and duration changes for all the symbols on the display.
Pan across a trend's time range. Exit Design mode, tap and hold the plot area of a trend and
slide right or left to move backwards or forwards in time.
Show menus to configure or format Tap and hold any symbol for a few seconds and quickly release
symbols. your finger.
Open a pop-up trend. Exit Design mode and double tap any data symbol (trend, table,
value, or gauge) to view its data plotted as a pop-up trend in a
separate, new display. The pop-up trend shows data from the
symbol on the original display.
Zoom in or out of a display. Pinch two fingers together to zoom out of a display. Stretch two
fingers apart to zoom in.
Training videos
Check out the videos on this YouTube playlist to better understand how to use AVEVA PI Vision:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLMcG1Hs2JbcvWPkSbIbQEJqsTX9Sa1nty
Home page
The AVEVA PI Vision home page lists thumbnails of displays that you can access. You can set
the page to show groups of displays, such as favorite or recently used displays; you can also
view displays stored in particular folders and you can search for displays with particular
names or owners, or filter by keywords.
In addition to viewing displays from the home page, you can share, delete, and mark displays as
favorites. You can also create new displays. Administrators and those with write-access can
create folders to organize displays. See Folders.
Videos
For more on this topic, watch the following video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GxU5k10eIJk
Folders
AVEVA PI Vision stores each display in a folder. By default, AVEVA PI Vision stores displays in
the Home folder.
Administrators can create other folders to organize displays. Administrators can give users
read-access and write-access to a folder. Those with read-access can see the folder and displays
within the folder. Those with write-access can see the folder, move displays into the folder,
create displays in the folder, and create subfolders in the folder, as well as rename or delete
subfolders, and set access to subfolders.
Folders let users more easily find displays and provide a place to store officially published
displays.
Create folders
You can create a subfolder in any folder to which you have write-access.
Procedure
1. From the left pane on the home page, click to drill into the folder.
2. Click Add New PI Vision Folder and then type the name of the new folder.
AVEVA PI Vision creates the subfolder. The new folder will have the same access settings as
its parent folder.
Folder permissions
AVEVA PI Vision folders can have two possible permissions assigned to a PI AF identity.
Permissions affect what users can do with a folder:
• Read
See the folder and parent folders. However, users can only see displays that they own or that
the owner shared with them.
• Write
Procedure
1. From the left pane on the home page, select the folder and then click Edit folder settings
to open the Folder Settings window.
The window lists PI AF identities that can read and write to the folder, and identities
currently not assigned any permission.
2. Set the desired access for the folder.
◦ To give an identity read-access, select an identity in the Unassigned AF Identities list and
then click the arrow to move to the list of identities with access. A check mark
automatically appears in the Read column.
◦ To give an identity write-access, select the Write check box.
◦ To remove write-access from an identity, clear the Write check box for that identity.
◦ To remove all access to the folder from an identity, select the identity and then click the
arrow to move the identity to the Unassigned AF Identities list.
Note:
Changing folder access can affect other folders.
◦ If you grant an identity read-access to a subfolder, AVEVA PI Vision also grants that
identity read-access to any parent folders.
◦ If you remove read-access from a folder, AVEVA PI Vision also removes read-access
for that identity from any subfolders.
3. To apply this access to subfolders and displays in those folders, select the Propagate
permissions check box.
Upon save, AVEVA PI Vision sets the same access permission to the current folder,
subfolders, and to any displays in those folders.
Note:
The Propagate permissions function does not apply to imported PI ProcessBook
displays.
4. Click Save.
Procedure
1. From a folder on the home page, such as the Home folder, select displays that you want to
move:
◦ To select all displays in the currently shown group of displays, click the Select all check
box.
◦ When you hover over the thumbnail, the check mark becomes available for displays
that you can edit. Click the check mark in the display thumbnail.
3. Select the folder that you want to move the display to, and then click Move.
AVEVA PI Vision moves the selected displays to the selected folder.
Rename a folder
You can rename a folder if you have write-access to its parent folder.
Procedure
1. From the left pane on the home page, select the folder and then click Edit folder settings
to open the Folder Settings window.
2. In the Folder Name box, enter the new name, and then click Save.
Delete a folder
You can delete a folder if you have write-access to the folder and its parent folder. When you
delete a folder, AVEVA PI Vision deletes any subfolders and moves any displays in the deleted
folder or subfolders to the Home folder.
Procedure
1. From the left pane on the home page, select the folder and then click Delete PI Vision Folder
.
Procedure
• In the pane on the left, select the group of displays to view:
◦ To select a predefined group:
▪ All Displays
All public and private displays to which you have access
▪ Favorites
Displays that you have marked as favorites (starred displays)
▪ My Displays
Displays that you have created
▪ Recent
Displays that you used within the last seven days
When you select one of these groups, AVEVA PI Vision shows the thumbnails from only
that group and filters the search box to search within only that group of displays.
◦ To select a folder:
Administrators can create folders to store displays. The Home folder stores displays not
stored in another folder. A special icon, , marks folders that can store PI ProcessBook
displays.
Results
The home page shows only the thumbnails from the selected group. Any new searches find
matching displays within the selected group.
Procedure
1. Select the folder or predefined group that contains the display. See View a specific group of
displays.
The background text in the search box indicates the group or folder, such as "All Displays,"
searched.
2. In the search box, enter text found in the display name or the name of the owner.
You can enter wildcards, such as asterisks (*), when you do not know all the letters or words
in the display name. A wildcard is a substitute character for a group of letters in a search
phrase. AVEVA PI Vision assumes an asterisk at the end of each entered search query. When
you do not know the first one or more words of the display name, enter an asterisk in front
of the search term. For example, enter *dashboard to find Mixing Tank Dashboard.
3. Press Enter or click Perform Search .
Procedure
1. Click New Display to open an empty display.
2. In the Assets pane, browse or search for data that you want to visualize. See Searching for
data.
3. In the Assets pane toolbar, select a symbol type. See Data visualization using symbols.
4. Drag an asset or attribute from the Assets pane into the display area.
AVEVA PI Vision inserts a symbol containing the selected data items into the display.
For more information about creating displays, see Create displays in Design mode.
1. Keywords
2. Read-only access
3. Display Owner control
4. Display Access
Note:
The options available on the Display Settings window depend on your AVEVA PI Vision
user role. Administrators have access to all Display Settings. Display Owners may only
access Keyword, Read-only, and display sharing options.
Keywords
The Keywords setting allows you to provide semi-colon separated keywords that someone may
use while searching for this display.
Note:
If you do not include a semi-colon between each keyword, all of the keywords will be
combined into one keyword when you click Save.
Read-only access
Select the Read-only check box to disable saving any changes to the display by any user,
including yourself.
Note:
If you want to make changes to a display that is Read-only, open that display and save it
under a different name.
Display Owner
Click Display Owner to change the owner for the selected display to a different user. This
display will appear in the selected user's Private displays if you do not grant access to any AF
Identities when you click Save.
Note:
This option is only available if you are an administrator for the account.
Display Sharing
By default, when you save a display, you are the only user who can view it, as indicated by the
Private display icon on the display thumbnail. After you create a display, you can share it
with other users who can open your display. Use the text box to search for specific identities.
This search returns identities that contain the characters or keywords you typed anywhere in
the identity name.
AVEVA PI Vision allows you to share displays selectively with your user groups. A PI
administrator using PI AF identities configures your user groups. A PI AF identity represents a
set of access permissions for a group of users. You can use the default PI AF identity group
World to share your display with everyone in your organization who is a member of that
group. Imported PI ProcessBook displays are shared with the PI AF identity World by default.
Note:
An AVEVA PI Vision administrator can reassign any user's display to a different user
group and change the owner of a display in the Display Settings window.
Click an identity under Unassigned AF Identities and then click Add Permissions to grant
When you grant access to a display for an AF Identity, you can specify the type of access that
you want to grant.
• Read access: Grants an AF Identity the ability to see and open the display.
• Write access: Grants an AF Identity the ability to save changes to a display.
By default, each added AF Identity receives Read access to the display. To grant the AF Identity
Write access for this display, select the Write check box.
Delete display
If you no longer need a display and want to remove it, click Delete display.
Note:
You cannot undo this action. Make sure you are certain before you delete a display.
Procedure
1. To create a display label, click Edit display settings on the thumbnail of the display.
2. To create a new label in the Display Settings window, enter keywords in the Keywords field
and click Save.
3. After creating a display label, click Filter by Keywords icon under the search box on the
home page and select that label.
The search results will only show the displays with that label.
If more than one display has the same label text, you can click the related displays icon
on a thumbnail to find all displays with that label text. If a display has multiple labels, the
related displays icon finds the thumbnail if the text of at least one label matches.
Procedure
• From the home page, click the star icon on the display thumbnail.
Basic tasks
AVEVA PI Vision organizes your process data into displays, which may contain symbols, such as
trends, tables, values, or gauges. Displays are designed to represent your operational
environment and can have symbols, shapes, images, and text.
The descriptions below introduce you to the basics for creating symbols and designing displays
in AVEVA PI Vision.
• Click the data item in the search results and drag it onto the display to view it as a symbol
with values.
• Move or resize the symbol or add new symbols to the display from the search results.
Save a display
To save your display, click the save icon in the top-right corner of the display. To save
your display with a different name, click the down arrow, and then click Save As and enter the
name of your display in the window.
Next time you are on the home page, you will see your saved display's name and thumbnail.
After you exit Design mode, you can view trend cursors by clicking on any trend or pan
backwards or forwards in time by dragging the highlighted lower section of the trend left or
right. (See Monitor displays.)
Display workspace
Displays are the foundation for visualizing data in AVEVA PI Vision and act as containers for
creating, editing, and storing symbols that represent your operational environment. Owners of
displays can make displays private or share the displays with other users. Each display has
exactly one owner, a single user (initially the display creator). Administrators can change
display ownership, and they can also edit the display, regardless of whether they are members
of an AF Identity with write access to the display. A user, who is not an administrator or a
member of an AF Identity with write access to the display, can only save their changes as a new
display.
The following figure shows the components in an AVEVA PI Vision display workspace.
1. Symbol gallery
2. Calculations
3. Graphics Library
4. Events
5. Assets pane
6. Attributes pane
7. Time bar control
8. Fit all and zoom
9. Save button
10. Design mode button
11. Asset list
Save displays
You must save displays to save changes that you make. You can save existing displays with a
new name and rename existing displays.
Procedure
• Save changes made to a display:
a. Click Save on the title bar or press Ctrl+S.
b. If you have not saved the display yet, the Save As window opens. Enter the display name
and then click Save. You can also select a folder to store the display if you have
permission to write to folders.
Note:
If another user updates and saves the same display prior to you, you will not be able to
save until you reload the display or save the display with a different name.
To refresh the display and abandon any new changes you have made since AVEVA PI
Vision detected the save conflict, click Reload. To retain your changes and save them
to a new display, click Save As.
b. In the Save As window, enter the new name for the display. You can also select a folder to
store the display if you have permission to write to folders.
c. Click Save.
• Rename an existing display:
a. Click the display name in the title bar.
b. Enter a new name.
c. Click Save on the title bar or press Ctrl+S.
Procedure
1. Click a data symbol in a PI ProcessBook display to open its trend view. The trend's time
range is based on the display's time range.
Note:
If you click a trend symbol, you see an enlarged version of the trend plus additional
descriptive information.
2. Optionally, change the duration and shift the display range forward or backward in time to
find the data that interests you.
Note that the new duration and start and end times apply to the underlying display.
3. When you have finished looking at the symbol's trend view, click to close the trend.
All dynamic symbols in the display now use the new duration and start and end times that
you set for the preview. For example, if you change the duration to 1 day for a preview, when
you close it, the original display now has a duration of 1 day.
4. To open a PI ProcessBook display as an AVEVA PI Vision display, click the Ad Hoc Display
button.
An AVEVA PI Vision display opens and shows your data in a single table. The ad hoc AVEVA
PI Vision display is read-only. If you want to save a copy of the display, click the down arrow
next to the Save button to "Save as" and enter a new display name.
When you open or create an AVEVA PI Vision display, your PI AF databases and PI Data Archive
servers are first shown in the Assets pane by default.
Procedure
1. Create a new display or open an existing display on the home page.
◦ To create a new display, click New Display.
◦ To open an existing display, click a display thumbnail or search for a display by name or
owner.
2. Click Assets.
You can also search by drilling down the navigation tree. See Search using the navigation
tree.
4. Enter a search term in search, and click or press Enter.
Note:
Search allows you to find PI AF elements, attributes, or PI points whose name exactly
matches the search or is found anywhere in the element, attribute, or PI point
description. You can also search using wildcards for partial matches. Do not use
quotation marks when entering search terms. A search results list displays under the
search. You may receive a message that the maximum number of assets has been
returned or search has timed out. You can re-try timed-out searches with more refined
terms to navigate further down a PI AF hierarchy. Using fewer wildcards may help as
well. To optimize your search, see About AVEVA PI Vision's search engine.
5. Once you find the data item you want to visualize, choose a symbol type from the symbol
gallery. You can choose to see your data as a trend, a value, a table, a vertical, horizontal, or
radial gauge, an XY plot, or an asset comparison table.
6. Click the data item and drag it from the Assets or Attributes panes onto the display.
You can drag either the parent asset, which automatically adds child attributes to the
display, or drag only an individual attribute from the Attributes pane. Assets without
attributes cannot be dragged.
To drag multiple data items, press the CTRL key, select the data items, and drag them onto
the display. For trends and tables, multiple data items are combined into a single symbol.
7. To view the same or another data item as a different symbol type, change the symbol type in
the symbol gallery and drag the data item onto the display.
• Tag/Asset/Attribute Name
• Tag/Asset/Attribute Description
Note:
Description search for elements and attributes is supported for PI AF Server versions
2.10.5 and later. Sites with a mix of PI AF Server versions support description matches if
the server version is 2.10.5 or higher.
You can use wildcards such as asterisks (*) when you do not know all the letters in the search
phrase. An asterisk is always assumed at the end of each entered search query.
Note:
You can turn off the default appended asterisk wildcard for the AVEVA PI Vision server
through a database setting. For information about how to change this parameter, see the
AVEVA PI Vision Installation and Administration Guide (https://docs.osisoft.com/
bundle/pi-vision/page/pi-vision-installation-and-administration-guide.html) or
download the PDF version from the OSIsoft Customer Portal (https://my.osisoft.com/).
Consider the following examples where asterisks are used in the search query:
Entered Search Query Search Results
gas Gas Tank Capacity, Gas Tank Level, Gas Tank Range
gas tank Gas Tank Capacity, Gas Tank Level, Gas Tank Range
level No results returned
*level Gas Tank Level
*tank Gas Tank Capacity, Gas Tank Level, Gas Tank Range
Procedure
1. In the Assets pane, select the check boxes next to the PI AF databases or PI Data Archive
servers that you would like to explore.
Click the arrow to begin navigating to your assets. As you drill down to your assets, you
can retrace your steps by clicking the back arrow, . Click Home to return to the list of your
PI AF databases and PI Data Archive servers.
If an asset has child attributes, they will be displayed in the Attributes pane.
2. Once you find the data item you want to visualize, choose a symbol type from the Symbol
Gallery. You can choose to see your data as a trend, a value, a table, a vertical, horizontal, or
radial gauge, an XY plot, or an asset comparison table. See Data visualization using symbols
for additional details.
3. Click the data item and drag it from the Assets or Attributes panes onto the display. You can
drag either the parent asset, which automatically adds all of its child attributes to the
display, or drag only an individual attribute from the Attributes pane. Assets without
attributes cannot be dragged.
To drag multiple data items, hold down CTRL key, select the data items, and drag them onto
the display. For trends and tables, and XY plots, multiple data items will be combined into a
single symbol.
4. To create another symbol using a different symbol type, select another symbol type from the
Symbol Gallery and drag a new data item onto the display.
Table Use the table symbol to view one or more data items in a table format.
Tables allow you to add multiple data items per symbol.
Gauges Vertical, horizontal, and radial gauge symbols provide a graphical view
• Vertical of the data value at the end time of the display range and can be
customized to look like a variety of measuring instruments.
• Horizontal
• Radial
Bar chart The bar chart is a graph that lets you compare multiple values. Bar
charts allow you to add multiple data items per symbol.
XY plot The XY plot allows you to correlate X-axis data sources with Y-axis data
sources to explore correlations between one or more pairs of data.
Asset Comparison The asset comparison table allows you to compare measurements and
Table other process information by organizing your data by assets.
Create a symbol
You can create a symbol to visualize data in a display.
Procedure
1. In the Assets pane, find the data that you want to visualize in the symbol. See Searching for
data.
2. Choose a symbol type in the symbol gallery.
You can view data as a trend, value, table, vertical gauge, horizontal gauge, bar chart, radial
gauge, XY plot, or asset comparison table. By default, the trend symbol type is selected.
3. Drag data items from the search results in the Assets or Attributes panes onto the display.
AVEVA PI Vision inserts the selected symbol on the display and visualizes the chosen data
items in that symbol.
Symbol types
AVEVA PI Vision offers a variety of symbols that you can use to visualize and monitor data.
Trend
Use a trend symbol to view values of one or more data items plotted against time on a graph.
Trends are typically used to display time-series data, though they may also include non-time-
series data.
To add a trend to a display, select the trend symbol icon from the Symbol Gallery and then
drag your data item from the search results onto the display.
1. Traces are the lines drawn on a trend that represent a series of data points from a data item.
When a trace is continuous, a line is drawn from measurement to measurement. When a
trace is discrete, the value is propagated forward until a new value is recorded in the
database. This results in horizontal and vertical lines for the tag (stepped trace).
2. Trend legend provides quick details about data items that are part of a trend and include the
data item's name, value, and unit of measure. The color of the legend corresponds with the
trace line used to draw the data on the trend. Clicking an item on the trend legend will
highlight the trace on the legend.
3. Value scale shows the range of values that appears within a trend.
4. Trend cursor helps you view your data with precision by showing a trend line, a legend
value, and a time stamp. Trend cursors are synchronized across multiple trends. Moving the
trend cursor over a trace changes the legend value. The legend value is the value of the data
on a trace at the time selected by the trend cursor. You can only view trend cursors when
you exit Design mode. (See Monitor trends with trend cursors.)
Value scale
Data values on a trend appear within a range of values that is referred to as the value scale. By
default, the value scale shows a separate scale for each data item (represented by a trace). The
scale indicates the highest high and lowest low values of the data items during the time range
of the display.
You can change the value scale to use a single consolidated scale for all data items, as opposed
to separate scales for each data item. Value scale settings persist for each trend even after you
close a display. You can also configure the maximum and minimum values of the value scale by
choosing between the maximum and minimum of the trend's plotted values or its pre-
configured maximum and minimum values. (See Configure trend and its style.)
Default configuration
Administrators can set the default configuration for new trend symbols across all displays
based on an existing trend symbol. You can set defaults for background color, foreground color,
grid style, trace format, value scale type and inversion, scale labels, and time scale. You can also
set defaults for traces including label format and trace color, line weight, line style, and
markers. You can set the defaults for as many traces as shown in the current trend. For
example, if the trend used to set defaults has two traces and you add a trend with three traces,
the third trace will use system defaults. For more information about display defaults, see the
AVEVA PI Vision Administration Guide (https://docs.osisoft.com/bundle/pi-vision/page/
aveva-pi-vision-administration-tasks.html).
Procedure
1. Right-click the trend and then click Configure Trend to open the Configure Trend pane.
2. Under Trend Options, customize the trend and its scale:
◦ Plot Title
Select Plot Title and type in the text box below
◦ Foreground
Select the color of the foreground, which includes the start and end time and the duration
of the display.
◦ Background
Select the color of the background.
◦ Format
Select the default format for numbers in the trend:
Format Description
Database Show numbers in a format that depends on the data item:
▪ For PI points or PI AF attributes, the format depends on the value
of the point's DisplayDigits attribute:
◦ Zero or positive numbers specify the number of digits to display to
the right of the decimal point.
◦ Negative numbers specify the number of significant digits.
◦ Traces
Configure the presentation style of each trace in your trend.
▪ Line
Default setting. Displays a trace line with no individual recorded data points.
▪ Data Markers
Displays individual recorded data points with connecting lines between them.
▪ Scatter Plot
▪ Bands
Default setting. Horizontal bars in alternating colors that divide each value on the Y
axis.
▪ Lines
Horizontal and vertical lines that divide each item on the X and Y axes.
Show separate high and low values for each individual data item on the trend. Each
scale shows a pair of high and low limits along the top and bottom of the value scale.
Incremental scale values are shown for the first trace.
▪ Single scale
Show only one value scale comprised of the lowest and highest values for all the traces
in the trend.
▪ Invert scale
Select this check box to reverse the scale's maximum and minimum values.
Note:
These settings apply regardless of whether you set the scale according to minimum
and maximum values of the trend's range of plotted values or to their configured
database values.
◦ Scale Range
Select the range of values on the axis:
▪ Autorange of dynamic values
Set the scale to the minimum and maximum plotted values of the trend's time range.
▪ Database limits
Set the scale to the data item's configured minimum and maximum values.
▪ Custom limits
Set the maximum and minimum values manually by entering the Top and Bottom
values.
Note:
You can only set custom trend values for a trend that shows a single scale.
◦ Scale Labels
▪ Inside plot area
Set the single scale or multiple scale labels to display inside of the plot area.
▪ Outside plot area
Set the single scale or multiple scale labels to display outside of the plot area.
Note:
Scale labels display inside of the plot area if you make the trend size too narrow
while using the Outside plot area setting.
4. Under Time Range, adjust the specific window and time scale for your trend:
◦ Start and End Times
Set the time range for the trend with three options:
▪ Default
Shows only the start and stop time in the scale for your trend as defined by the Start
and End Times control.
▪ Timestamps
Labels the start and end time limits with the date and time. When space permits, the
elapsed time between these lines is also shown.
▪ Relative
Labels each grid line with the amount of time preceding the end time limit in days,
hours, minutes, or seconds. For example, the scale grid lines might be labeled -4h, -3h,
- 2h, -1h, meaning 4, 3, 2, and 1 hours before the end time.
▪ Use the left pair of Up or Down arrows to move the selected trace higher or lower on
the trend in relationship to other traces.
▪ Use the right pair of Up or Down arrows to move the selected trace all the way to the
top or bottom of the trend.
▪ Click X to delete the selected trace.
b. Customize the appearance of the selected trace:
▪ Legend Label
Text that describes the trace. Select a label from the list (an attribute name or
description) or enter custom text.
▪ Color
Select the color of the trace.
▪ Weight
Set the width of the trace.
▪ Style
Select the style of the trace, which can be a line, dots, dashes of various lengths, or
combinations of dashes and dots.
▪ Marker
Select a symbol (if you want to include one) to add to the left of the trace Legend
Label.
▪ Format
Select the number format for the selected trace:
Format Description
Trend Setting Show numbers in the default format specified for the trend.
Database Show numbers in a format that depends on the data item:
◦ For PI points or PI AF attributes, the format depends on the
value of the point's DisplayDigits attribute:
◦ Zero or positive numbers specify the number of digits to display
to the right of the decimal point.
◦ Negative numbers specify the number of significant digits.
▪ Units
Either Default for the base units or a listed unit to convert to. Only units appropriate
for conversion from the base unit are listed.
c. If your trend has multiple scales, use the Scale Range list to specify the maximum and
minimum values on the value scale of each trace.
Select from the following options:
▪ Default to trend settings
Set the scale of the trace to the settings defined for the trend in Scale Range setting
under Value Scales.
▪ Set limits for this trace
Set the scale of the trace with one of the Scale Range options defined above.
6. Under Reset, click Use default settings to reset the trend and trace options to default
settings.
7. Click the down arrow at the top of the pane and then click Add Navigation Link to add a
navigation link to the symbol.
See Add a navigation link to another display or website.
8. To save the current settings as the defaults for all new trend symbols, under Save Default
Configuration click Save Defaults.
Note:
You must have administrator privileges to save defaults.
Procedure
1. To delete a trace, right-click anywhere on the trend and select Configure trend to open the
Format Trend pane.
a. Under Trace Options, use the trace list to select the trace you want to delete.
b. Click the X to remove the data item and its corresponding trace from the trend.
2. To hide a trace, right-click its trend legend on the trend and select Hide Trace.
The data item is grayed out, and you are no longer able to see its trace.
3. To show a hidden trace, right-click its grayed out trend legend and select Show Trace.
Procedure
1. Click Monitor Operations, , to exit Design mode.
2. Add a cursor by clicking any area on a trend. Add as many cursors as you want. A cursor, its
value, and associated timestamp appear. Trend cursors appear across all the trends on your
display.
3. Remove a cursor by clicking and dragging the cursor off either side of the trend.
Procedure
1. To pan across the time range directly on the trend, exit Design mode by clicking .
2. Move the cursor to the bottom of the trend until the cursor changes to a drag cursor.
3. Click the highlighted lower section of the trend and drag the trend left or right to pan across
the time range backwards or forwards. Panning across an individual trend will change the
time range of all the symbols on the display. The duration of the time range (1 hour, 8 hours,
1 day, etc.), will not be affected.
4. To return back to the "now" and get dynamically updating data for all the symbols, click the
Now button on the timebar.
Zoom in on a trend
The trend zoom is a powerful analysis tool that allows you to zoom in on a particular range of
time and value in a display.
The trend zoom changes the start and end time for the entire display, thus affecting all symbols.
Procedure
1. Exit Design mode by clicking .
2. Drag your pointer over any area of a trend. The area you drag over remains illuminated,
while the remaining portions of the trend are grayed out.
3. Release the pointer. The trend redraws, zooming in on the area you just selected. The start
time and end time of the display, and all trend traces are adjusted accordingly.
Note:
To undo your last zoom action on a trend, press CTRL+Z.
Value
Use the value symbol to show the value of a data item on your display. A value is the reading
obtained for a data item at the end time of a display. It is shown as a number, time stamp,
string, or digital state. If the data item stores a URL, then the symbol shows an active hyperlink
in the display. Value symbols are dynamic and update each time the underlying data item
updates.
To add a value to a display, click the value symbol icon in the Symbol Gallery, and then
drag a data item from the search results onto the display. You can configure the unit of measure
(UOM) shown for the value. If you select a different UOM from what is stored for the value, the
value is converted to that UOM for the display. For AF calculation values, select the UOM for the
calculation, which can then be converted.
Note:
When you create a value symbol from a data item that is in a null or shutdown state, the
value symbol is darkened.
Administrators can set the default configuration for value symbols across all displays. Defaults
can be set for everything except custom label text. For more information about display defaults,
see the AVEVA PI Vision Administration Guide (https://docs.osisoft.com/bundle/pi-vision/
page/aveva-pi-vision-administration-tasks.html).
Procedure
1. Right-click a value symbol and click Format Value to open the Format Value pane.
2. Under Style, set the colors, font, number format, and text alignment:
◦ Fill
Background color.
◦ Text
Color of text.
◦ Font Size
Size of font.
◦ Value
Color of value.
◦ Format
Number format:
Format Description
Database Show numbers in a format that depends on the data item:
▪ For PI points or PI AF attributes with a PI point data reference, the
format depends on the value of the point's DisplayDigits
attribute:
◦ Zero or positive numbers specify the number of digits to display to
the right of the decimal point.
◦ Negative numbers specify the number of significant digits.
▪ For PI AF attributes without a PI point data reference, numbers
show 5 significant digits.
All data items show the thousands separator.
Format Description
General Show all significant digits for numbers except for trailing zeros. If the
absolute value of the number is greater than 1x10^7 or less than
1x10^-5, the format will switch to use scientific notation.
Number Show numbers in the custom format that you specify:
▪ Decimal Places
The number of digits shown after the decimal.
▪ Use 1000 separator
Select this check box to show the thousands separator in large
numbers.
Scientific Show numbers in the format 0.00E+00.
◦ Text Alignment
Either Left, Center, or Right.
◦ Units
Either Default for the base units or a listed unit to convert to. Only units appropriate for
conversion from the base unit are listed.
3. Under Visibility, specify the information that appears in the value symbol.
◦ Label
Create a custom label or choose a default label from the list. Clear the check box to hide
the label.
◦ Units
Clear the check box to hide the units of measurement.
◦ Timestamp
Clear the check box to hide the value's time stamp (consisting of a date and time).
◦ Value
Clear the check box to hide the value.
◦ Show Indicator
If the target is defined, select the check box to view the target indicator. See Add a target
indicator.
4. Click the down arrow at the top of the pane and then click the option to add a multi-state
or a navigation link to the symbol.
See Multi-state behaviors or Add a navigation link to another display or website.
5. To save the current settings as the defaults for all new value symbols, under Save Default
Configuration click Save Defaults.
Note:
You must have administrator privileges to save defaults.
Procedure
1. Find the desired attribute that has a defined target in PI System Explorer and view it as a
value symbol on the display.
2. Right-click the value symbol and click Format Value to open the Format Value pane.
3. In the Format Value pane, under Target Value Indicator, select the Show Indicator check
box.
Note:
The Show Indicator check box will only appear for attributes that have a defined
target in PI System Explorer.
The target indicator arrow, the target value, and the target differential will be shown to the
right of the attribute value.
4. Under Target Value Indicator, you can customize the target indicator by setting the
following:
a. Show Differential
The differential shows the difference between the attribute value and the target value. To
hide the differential, clear the check box.
Select the color of the target arrow and the differential when the attribute's value is
below the target value.
Table
Use the table symbol to add one or more data items to a display in a table format.
To add a table symbol to a display, click the table symbol icon in the Symbol Gallery and
then drag data items from the search results onto the display.
If the data item stores a URL, then the Value column contains an active hyperlink (depicted by
) for the data item in the table.
To sort the data columns in alphabetical or numerical order, click a column heading. Clicking
the heading more than once reverses the sort order.
To resize columns, hover your mouse cursor over a column separator in the table heading and
move the double-arrow cursor to the appropriate width. Change the column order by clicking
on a column header and dragging it to another location on the table, either left or right.
Note:
You can add dynamic search criteria to a table and automatically find, show, and update
data from similar assets inside the table. See Add dynamic search criteria.
Administrators can set the default configuration for table symbols across all displays. Defaults
can be set for everything except custom label text. For more information about display defaults,
see the AVEVA PI Vision Administration Guide (https://docs.osisoft.com/bundle/pi-vision/
page/aveva-pi-vision-administration-tasks.html).
Configure a table
Use the Configure Table pane to customize the table's columns and rows.
The table symbol contains columns for the name, value, description, and other summary data
about a data item. These summary data values take their intervals from the display's time
range as defined in the time bar.
Procedure
1. Right-click the table and click Configure Table to open the Configure Table pane.
2. Under Style, select the table style that best accommodates your work environment. Choose
from default, light, or dark.
3. Under Columns, click on a column to access the check boxes that control that column. Select
the Show Column to include the column or clear it to exclude the column. The check box is
selected for columns shown in bold. Select the Wrap Text check box to display text in the
column on multiple lines or clear it to keep the text on one line. The Wrap Text check box is
only available for Path, Name, Description, Value, and Time.
The columns available in a table are:
◦ Path
Full path of the data item. For PI points (tags), this is the path to the PI Data Archive
server. For PI AF assets and attributes the path is the entire PI AF path up until the last
asset-attribute pair.
◦ Name
Name of the data item (for example, the PI points or asset-attribute pair).
◦ Description
Description as defined in the descriptor property for PI points or the description
attribute for PI AF data.
◦ Value
Reading or snapshot obtained at the specified end time of the time bar. It is shown as a
number or a digital-state string.
◦ Units
Unit of measure for the data item.
◦ Time
Time stamp when the value was last updated.
◦ Trend
Graphic that provides a quick way to see how a data item is trending. For example, if an
operator notices that the volume of a sparkline is escalating rapidly, it may be an
indication that there might be a problem that requires further analysis.
◦ Target
Aimed-for measurement value to which you can compare your attribute's value.
Note:
To see the target, a target must be defined when setting the limit attribute traits in
PI System Explorer. For more information, see the PI Server topic Attribute traits
(https://docs.osisoft.com/bundle/pi-server/page/attribute-traits.html).
◦ Target Indicator
Arrow that indicates if your attribute is over or under the target value.
◦ Target % Δ
Differential between the attribute value and the target value as a percentage.
◦ Target Δ
Differential between the attribute value and the target value.
◦ Average
Average value of the data item using the display range as the interval.
◦ Minimum
Minimum value of the data item using the display range as the interval.
◦ Maximum
Maximum value of the data item using the display range as the interval.
◦ StdDev
5. Under Rows, use the rows list to select, move, or delete a row:
◦ Use the left pair of up or down arrows to move the selected row higher or lower on the
table.
◦ Use the right pair of up or down arrows to move the selected row all the way to the top or
bottom of the table.
◦ Click X to delete the selected row.
To change the units for a row, select the row, and then in the Units field, select the units
from the drop-down list. Only units appropriate for conversion from the base unit are listed.
6. Click the down arrow at the top of the pane and then click Add Navigation Link to add a
navigation link to the symbol.
See Add a navigation link to another display or website.
7. To save the current settings as the defaults for all table symbols created on the site, under
Save Default Configuration click Save Defaults.
Note:
You must have administrator privileges to save defaults.
Gauges
Gauge symbols provide a graphical view of the value reading at the end time of the display
range, and allow you to determine at a glance whether that value is within an acceptable range.
Gauges provide a scale, tick marks, and a bar, arc or pointer that indicates the current value.
Note:
If you hover over a gauge symbol with your mouse pointer, a tooltip appears with
additional information about your data item.
To add a gauge to a display, select the vertical , horizontal , or radial gauge
Administrators can set the default configuration for horizontal and vertical gauge symbols
across all displays. Defaults are the same for both gauge types and can be set for everything
except custom label text. For more information about display defaults, see the AVEVA PI Vision
Administration Guide (https://docs.osisoft.com/bundle/pi-vision/page/aveva-pi-vision-
administration-tasks.html).
Radial gauge
Radial gauges show the current value of your data and provide a customizable indicator, dial
face, label, and scale.
Note:
When you create a gauge symbol from a data item that is in a System Digital State, the
gauge symbol appears striped.
Administrators can set the default configuration for radial gauge symbols across all displays.
Defaults can be set for everything except custom label text. For more information about display
defaults, see the AVEVA PI Vision Administration Guide (https://docs.osisoft.com/bundle/pi-
vision/page/aveva-pi-vision-administration-tasks.html).
Procedure
1. Right-click a gauge symbol and click Format Gauge to open the Format Gauge pane.
2. Under Style, customize the gauge's colors.
◦ Bar
Color of the bar. The bar shows the value of a measurement on the scale.
◦ Fill
Color of the fill. The fill is the gauge's background above the bar (or below the bar if the
gauge is inverted).
◦ Outline
Color of the border, value scale, and label.
◦ Weight
Thickness of the border.
◦ Value
Color of the value.
◦ Format
Display format of the value.
Format Description
Database Show numbers in a format that depends on the data item:
▪ For PI points or PI AF attributes with a PI point data reference, the
format depends on the value of the point's DisplayDigits
attribute:
◦ Zero or positive numbers specify the number of digits to display to
the right of the decimal point.
◦ Negative numbers specify the number of significant digits.
▪ For PI AF attributes without a PI point data reference, numbers
show 5 significant digits.
All data items show the thousands separator.
Format Description
General Show all significant digits for numbers except for trailing zeros. If the
absolute value of the number is greater than 1x10^7 or less than
1x10^-5, the format will switch to use scientific notation.
Number Show numbers in the custom format that you specify:
▪ Decimal Places
The number of digits shown after the decimal.
▪ Use 1000 separator
Select this check box to show the thousands separator in large
numbers.
Scientific Show numbers in the format 0.00E+00.
◦ Units
Set the display units for the value. Either Default for the base units or a listed unit to
convert to. Only units appropriate for conversion from the base unit are listed.
3. Under Visibility, select the check boxes next to the information that you want on the gauge.
◦ Label
Text that describes the gauge. Select a label from the list (an attribute name or
description) or enter custom text.
◦ Value
Value of the attribute.
◦ Units
Units of measurement for the attribute.
4. Under Scale Range, configure the maximum and minimum values on the scale.
◦ Use database settings
Set the scale to the data item's configured minimum and maximum values.
Select the Invert Scale check box to reverse the start and end scale values.
◦ Enter custom settings
Set the maximum and minimum values of the gauge manually. Enter the Top and Bottom
values for vertical gauges, or enter the Right and Left values for horizontal gauges. To
reverse the start and end scale values, enter the numbers in reverse.
◦ Select an option from the Scale Range drop-down list. the start value, which is the point
on the scale from which you want to start drawing the bar.
◦ Select a Start Value
Use the scale start value from the AF database (Default).
Select Custom to change the point at which the scale values begin.
Note:
If your actual value is less than your start value, your bar will display inversely.
5. Click the down arrow at the top of the pane and then click the option to add a multi-state
or a navigation link to the symbol.
Procedure
1. Right-click the gauge and then click Format Gauge to open the Format Gauge pane.
2. Under Style, customize the appearance of the gauge:
◦ Type
Indicator type for the gauge. You can select an arc, a triangle, a pointer, or a line.
◦ Angle
Angle of the face.
◦ Indicator
Color of the indicator.
◦ Size
Size of the indicator.
◦ Fill
Color of the fill. The fill is the dial area. For an arc-type indicator, the fill is the
background.
◦ Outline
Color of the outline. The outline is the scale's border without the tick marks and scale
labels.
◦ Weight
Thickness of the outline.
◦ Scale
Color of the tick marks and labels.
◦ Value
Color of the data value.
◦ Format
Display format of the value.
Format Description
Database Show numbers in a format that depends on the data item:
▪ For PI points or PI AF attributes with a PI point data reference, the
format depends on the value of the point's DisplayDigits
attribute:
◦ Zero or positive numbers specify the number of digits to display to
the right of the decimal point.
◦ Negative numbers specify the number of significant digits.
▪ For PI AF attributes without a PI point data reference, numbers
show 5 significant digits.
All data items show the thousands separator.
General Show all significant digits for numbers except for trailing zeros. If the
absolute value of the number is greater than 1x10^7 or less than
1x10^-5, the format will switch to use scientific notation.
Number Show numbers in the custom format that you specify:
▪ Decimal Places
The number of digits shown after the decimal.
▪ Use 1000 separator
Select this check box to show the thousands separator in large
numbers.
Scientific Show numbers in the format 0.00E+00.
◦ Units
Set the display units for the value. Either Default for the base units or a listed unit to
convert to. Only units appropriate for conversion from the base unit are listed.
3. Under Visibility, select the information you want to appear on the gauge:
◦ Label
Text that describes the gauge. Select a label from the list (an attribute name or
description) or enter custom text.
◦ Value
Value of the attribute.
◦ Units
Units of measurement for the attribute.
◦ Label Location
Location of the label, either above or below the gauge.
◦ Scale
Amount of labels on the scale, either all or only the first and last labels.
4. Under Scale Range, configure the maximum and minimum values on the scale:
◦ Database limits
Set the scale to the data item's configured minimum and maximum values.
Select the Invert Scale check box to reverse the start and end scale values.
◦ Custom limits
Set the maximum and minimum values of the gauge manually. Enter the Right and Left
values. To reverse the start and end scale values, enter the numbers in reverse.
Note:
When working with data containing digital states (such as LOW, HIGH, OPEN, CLOSE,
ON, or OFF) rather than numerical values, you will be able to select digital states
from the list for the start and end of the scale. For more information, see the PI
Server topic Digital state sets (https://docs.osisoft.com/bundle/pi-server/page/
digital-state-sets.html).
◦ Arc start
Use the scale start value from the AF database (Default).
◦ Select Custom to change the point at which the scale values begin.
Note:
If your actual value is less than your start value, your bar will display inversely.
5. Click the down arrow at the top of the pane and then click the option to add a multi-state
or a navigation link to the symbol.
See Multi-state behaviors or Add a navigation link to another display or website.
6. To save the current settings as the defaults for all new radial gauge symbols, under Save
Default Configuration click Save Defaults.
Note:
You must have administrator privileges to save defaults.
Bar chart
Use a bar chart symbol to compare multiple values through graphical representation. Bar
charts are often used to compare multiple data sources, where one bar represents one data
source. A data source could be from PI, from AF, or a calculation.
To add a bar chart to a display, select the bar chart symbol icon from the Symbol Gallery
and then drag a data item from the search results onto the display. The following image shows
a sample bar chart.
If the bar chart has a navigation link, hover your mouse over the chart area to access the link in
a tooltip. Hover your mouse over each bar to see the label, value, units, and time for the data
source associated with that bar. When you resize the chart, the bars and the spaces between
them adjust automatically.
The bar chart does not require configuration, but you can use the options available in the
Configuration pane to customize the chart. The default orientation is vertical, but you can
change it to be horizontal.
Administrators can set the default configuration for bar chart symbols across all displays.
Defaults can be set for everything except custom label text. For more information about display
defaults, see the AVEVA PI Vision Administration Guide (https://docs.osisoft.com/bundle/pi-
vision/page/aveva-pi-vision-administration-tasks.html).
Scale
Data values on a bar chart appear within a range of values that is referred to as the scale. The
scale indicates the highest high and lowest low values of the data items. The scale defaults to
the maximum and minimum values of the combined database settings. At each scale value, a
vertical grid line extends across the plot area.
Note:
If the bars have different units of measure, the scale is not displayed.
Multi-state
When you enable multi-state, there are five (5) equally spaced ranges for numeric values. The
range of numeric values for a multi-state chart defaults to the same numeric range as the value
scale. You can use the options available in the Multi-state Configuration pane to customize the
chart. The display author can select whether to apply the multi-state definition to the bars or to
define colored bands on the background of the bar chart.
When all data sources are digital with a common set of state values, the multi-state pane
defaults to using these states.
Once you configure multi-state, it is not automatically updated if you change the data sources
for the bar chart. For example, if all data sources use the same digital states when the multi-
state is created, but then those data sources are replaced with numeric values, the multi-state
will continue to show the original values and all non-digital values will be in error.
Procedure
1. Right-click the bar chart and then click Format Bar Chart to open the Format Bar Chart pane.
2. Under Style, customize the chart:
◦ Title
Select the Title check box and type in the text box below.
◦ Bars
Select the color of the bars in the chart.
◦ Foreground
Select the color of the foreground, which includes the grid, labels, and title.
◦ Background
Select the color of the background.
◦ Value
◦ Format
Select the default format for numbers in the chart:
Format Description
Database Show numbers in a format that depends on the data item:
▪ For PI points or PI AF attributes, the format depends on the value
of the point's DisplayDigits attribute:
◦ Zero or positive numbers specify the number of digits to display to
the right of the decimal point.
◦ Negative numbers specify the number of significant digits.
◦ Orientation
▪ Vertical
▪ Horizontal
▪ Bands
Bars in alternating colors that divide each value on the unit axis.
▪ Lines
Default setting. Lines that divide each item on the unit axis.
▪ Plain
▪ Use the left pair of Up or Down arrows to move the selected bar higher or lower on the
chart in relationship to other bars.
▪ Use the right pair of Up or Down arrows to move the selected bar all the way to the
top or bottom of the chart.
▪ Click X to delete the selected trace.
b. In the Bar Label field, select a label from the list, such as an attribute name or
description, or enter custom text.
c. In the Units field, select the unit for the bar. Either Default for the base units or a listed
unit to convert to. Only units appropriate for conversion from the base unit are listed.
5. Under Scale Range, configure the maximum and minimum values on the scale.
◦ Use database settings
Set the scale to the data item's configured minimum and maximum values.
Select the Invert Scale check box to reverse the start and end scale values.
◦ Enter custom settings
Set the maximum and minimum values of the axis manually. Enter the Top and Bottom
values for vertical bar charts, or enter the Right and Left values for horizontal bar charts.
To reverse the start and end scale values, enter the numbers in reverse.
◦ Select a Bar Start value, which is the point on the scale from which you want to start
drawing the bar.
Select Default to use the bottom value from the scale range.
Select Custom to set the value at which the scale begins.
6. To save the current settings as the defaults for all new bar chart symbols, under Save
Default Configuration click Save Defaults.
Note:
You must have administrator privileges to save defaults.
Procedure
1. Right-click on the bar chart and select Format Bar Chart to open the Format Bar Chart pane.
2. In the Bar Options area, select the data source for the bar you want to delete and click .
Results
The selected bar is removed from the bar chart.
XY plot
Use an XY plot (also called a scatter plot) to correlate one or more X-axis data sources with one
or more Y-axis data sources. On an XY plot, each axis shows possible values from their
respective data sources. The plot matches recorded values from the X-axis data source with
recorded values from the Y-axis data source and marks each matched pair with a data point.
For example, the following image shows a basic XY plot.
The example shows 10-minute intervals of two data items, A and B, for the last hour. Item A
had 12 recorded values; item B had 16 recorded values. The number of plotted data points
equals the number of pairs. Since A had fewer recorded values, the plot shows only 12 data
points. AVEVA PI Vision ignores the extra recorded values from point B. You can configure the
method to pair values.
Correlation measures the strength of the relationship between two variables. The plot
indicates correlation by the spread of the data points around a fitted straight line (for example,
a straight line that indicates the trend of the data). In general, the closer the points are to the
fitted line, the stronger the correlation. The following plot shows perfectly correlated data.
Plot a current operating (single) point on a static Evaluate the current state of your process.
curve.
Administrators can set the default configuration for XY plot symbols across all displays.
Defaults do not include data item level configurations or custom label text. For more
information about display defaults, see the AVEVA PI Vision Administration Guide (https://
docs.osisoft.com/bundle/pi-vision/page/aveva-pi-vision-administration-tasks.html).
Create an XY plot
To create an XY plot, drag data items from the Assets pane to the display. A plot requires at
least two data items for data to be visible.
Procedure
1. In the Assets pane, find the data items that you want to plot.
2. Click XY Plot in the symbol gallery.
3. Drag the data items from the Assets pane to the display.
AVEVA PI Vision creates an XY plot and adds the data items:
◦ If you drag a single data item, AVEVA PI Vision creates an empty XY plot with the added
item designated as the X-axis data source.
◦ If you drag multiple items simultaneously, AVEVA PI Vision designates one as the X-axis
data source and others as Y-axis data sources.
◦ If you drag any additional items, AVEVA PI Vision adds the items as Y-axis data sources.
◦ If you drag an asset rather than an attribute, AVEVA PI Vision adds all the data items
under that asset.
After you drag at least two items, AVEVA PI Vision opens the Configure XY Plot pane and
assigns default values. The plot shows color coded data points for paired values. Labels on
the X- and Y-axes show their respective data source names.
Procedure
• To add attributes:
To add attribute to: Do this:
X-axis Drag an attribute from the Assets pane, Calculations, or Columns pane to
the DRAG TO ADD cell in the X-axis column.
AVEVA PI Vision creates a new row in the table with the asset as an X-axis
data source.
Y-axis Drag an attribute from the Assets pane, Calculations, or Columns pane to
the DRAG TO ADD cell in the Y-axis column of the row that contains the
desired X-axis attribute.
AVEVA PI Vision pairs the new attribute with the attribute in the X-axis.
• To delete attributes:
a. In the table, select the row that contains the attribute.
b. Find the attribute under either X-Axis or Y-Axis.
c. Click Delete .
Note:
You cannot delete the only attribute in the X-axis.
• To change the order of attributes:
a. In the table, select the row that contains the attribute.
b. Find the attribute under either X Data Options or Y Data Options.
c. Click Down to move the attribute down in the list or click Up to move the attribute
up in the list.
Note:
You cannot delete the only attribute in the X-axis.
Procedure
1. Select an X-axis row.
2. Under X Data Options, configure the X-axis attribute.
◦ From the Data Retrieval list, select the method to retrieve X-axis attribute data:
▪ Sampled
Retrieve interpolated X-axis values for the specified time range in regular intervals.
For example, if the time range is one hour and the Interval is set to 10m, then AVEVA PI
Vision retrieves six values spaced 10 minutes apart. This option provides a way to
retrieve evenly sampled data.
Note:
If you select this method, you must specify the sampling interval for your data.
Enter a value in the Interval field and select a unit of time (second, minute, hour,
day, week, month, or year).
▪ Compressed
Retrieve the actual values at their recorded times in PI Data Archive between the
specified start and end time.
Note:
Compressed Data Retrieval is not available when you use a calculation for your
X-axis.
▪ Current Value
Retrieve a single X-axis value at the current time of the display.
◦ To configure the time range for the plot, select an option for the Start and End Times:
▪ Display time range
Use the time range for the overall display. XY plots configured with the Display time
range option update when you change the display time.
▪ Duration and Offset
Set the length of time to show in the XY plot in seconds, minutes, hours, days, weeks,
or months and the offset from the overall display's end time in seconds, minutes,
hours, days, weeks, or months. XY plots configured with the Duration and Offset
option update when you change the display time.
▪ Use custom time range
Set a custom start time and end time for the XY plot. Relative PI Time is also
acceptable (Y, T, *,*, -8h, etc.). XY plots configured with the Use custom time range
option do not update when you change the display time.
3. For each Y-axis attribute (listed under a separate Y Data Options section), configure the
data pairing and data retrieval method.
◦ Under Data Pairing to X, select the method to match this Y-axis attribute with the X-axis
attribute:
▪ Paired by timestamp
AVEVA PI Vision finds Y-axis attribute values using the time stamp of each retrieved X-
axis value.
▪ Paired by position in the list
AVEVA PI Vision retrieves Y-axis values independently of X-axis values and pairs the
values by position in the list of values. (Y1 is paired with X1, Y2 is paired with X2, and
so on.) This option allows you to specify different time ranges for X-axis and Y-axis
values.
Note:
AVEVA PI Vision ignores Y-axis values in excess of the number of retrieved X-axis
values.
◦ From the Data Retrieval list, select the method to retrieve Y-axis attribute data. Available
retrieval methods depend on the selected data-pairing method.
Retrieval methods for data paired by time stamp:
▪ Interpolated
Retrieve interpolated Y-axis values at the same time stamp as each retrieved X-axis
data point. X-axis and Y-axis values for each data point represent process
measurements from the same point in time.
▪ Exact time
Retrieve only actual Y-axis values with the same time stamp as the X-axis values.
▪ Exact time or previous value
Retrieve Y-axis values with the same time stamp as the X-axis values. When a Y-axis
value is unavailable at the X-axis time stamp, use the previous Y-axis value.
▪ Exact time or next value
Retrieve Y-axis values with the same time stamp as the X-axis values. When a Y-axis
value is unavailable at the X-axis time stamp, use the next Y-axis value.
Retrieval methods for data paired by position:
▪ Sampled
Retrieve interpolated Y-axis values for the specified time range in regular intervals. If
you choose this method, you must specify the Interval period for sampling your data.
▪ Compressed
Retrieve the actual values stored between the specified start and end time.
Note:
Compressed Data Retrieval is not available when you use a calculation for your
Y-axis
For data paired by position, select the Override X Time Range check box to use a different
time range. Enter the start and end times of the time range.
Procedure
1. Right-click the XY plot, and then click Configure XY Plot to open the Configure XY Plot pane.
2. Under Scales, configure the scales and their values:
a. To view a separate scale for each Y-axis data source, select the Multiple Y Scales check
box.
b. From the Scale Range list, select the method for determining the minimum and
maximum values on the scales:
Procedure
1. In the Configure XY Plot pane, expand the Format section.
Tip:
You can collapse the Attributes section to access the Format tab.
2. Select the row in the table that corresponds to the X-axis and Y-axis data pair that you want
to format.
3. Specify how the selected data pair appears in the XY plot:
◦ Color
Select the color for the data pair.
◦ Marker Style
Select the type of marker for each data point on the plot.
◦ Most Recent Points
Select the number of recent data points to highlight in the Count list, and select the color
for those points in the Color list.
◦ Connecting Line
Select the check box to show a line connecting each data point.
◦ Regression Line
Select the check box to show a linear regression line.
◦ Correlation Coefficient
Select the check box to show the calculated correlation coefficient in the legend.
◦ Legend
Select the information you want in the legend for the data pair.
◦ Format
Select the number format for the data pair:
Format Description
Default Show numbers in the format specified for the plot under General.
Format Description
Database Show numbers in a format that depends on the data item:
▪ For PI points or PI AF attributes with a PI point data reference, the
format depends on the value of the point's DisplayDigits
attribute:
◦ Zero or positive numbers specify the number of digits to display to
the right of the decimal point.
◦ Negative numbers specify the number of significant digits.
▪ For PI AF attributes without a PI point data reference, numbers
show 5 significant digits.
All data items show the thousands separator.
General Show all significant digits for numbers except for trailing zeros. If the
absolute value of the number is greater than 1x10^7 or less than
1x10^-5, the format will switch to use scientific notation.
Number Show numbers in the custom format that you specify:
▪ Decimal Places
The number of digits shown after the decimal.
▪ Use 1000 separator
Select this check box to show the thousands separator in large
numbers.
Scientific Show numbers in the format 0.00E+00.
Procedure
1. In the Configure XY Plot pane, expand the General section.
Tip:
You can collapse the Attributes section.
2. Specify desired properties of the XY plot:
◦ Format
Select the default format for numbers in the trend:
Format Description
Database Show numbers in a format that depends on the data item:
▪ For PI points or PI AF attributes with a PI point data reference, the
format depends on the value of the point's DisplayDigits
attribute:
◦ Zero or positive numbers specify the number of digits to display to
the right of the decimal point.
◦ Negative numbers specify the number of significant digits.
▪ For PI AF attributes without a PI point data reference, numbers
show 5 significant digits.
All data items show the thousands separator.
General Show all significant digits for numbers except for trailing zeros. If the
absolute value of the number is greater than 1x10^7 or less than
1x10^-5, the format will switch to use scientific notation.
Number Show numbers in the custom format that you specify:
▪ Decimal Places
The number of digits shown after the decimal.
▪ Use 1000 separator
Select this check box to show the thousands separator in large
numbers.
Scientific Show numbers in the format 0.00E+00.
◦ Background
Select the color of the background.
◦ Plot Title
Select the check box to include a title, and then enter the title inside the text field, and
select the position and color for the title.
◦ Legend
Select the check box to show the plot's legend. Then select the position of the legend and
color of text in the legend and the X-axis label.
◦ Grid Lines
Select the check box to show or hide grid lines on the plot. You can also set the Color for
the grid lines.
◦ Engineering Units
Select the check box to show the units of measurement on the legend and the X-axis label.
◦ X-Axis Label
Select the check box to show an X-axis label, and then select the label.
◦ Y-Axis Label
Select the check box to show the Y-axis label, and then select the label.
3. To save the current settings as the defaults for all new XY plot symbols, under Save Default
Configuration click Save Defaults.
Note:
You must have administrator privileges to save defaults.
Procedure
1. Right-click the XY plot, and then click Configure XY Plot to open the Configure XY Plot pane.
2. For each additional time period that you want plotted, add the paired attributes to the table
under Attributes.
a. Drag the X-axis attribute from the Assets pane to the DRAG TO ADD cell in the X-Axis
column.
b. Drag the Y-axis attribute from the Assets pane to the DRAG TO ADD cell in the Y-Axis
column.
c. Verify the data retrieval methods for the added attributes.
For consistency, use the same data retrieval methods for comparable paired attributes.
3. Set the time period for each set of paired attributes.
a. Select the row in the table under Attributes that corresponds to the paired attributes.
b. Under X Data Options, select the Use Custom Time Range check box.
c. Specify the time period for the selected paired attributes. Enter values in both Start and
End.
▪ For repeatable processes, select Offset and enter a PI time abbreviation for the time
offset that represents the frequency of the process. For example, if a process happens
twice a day, then it happens every 12 hours: enter -12h; if a process happens three
times a day, then it happens every 8 hours: enter -8h.
▪ For a reference process, such as a golden batch, select Time and enter the time when
the reference process occurred.
After you specify a custom time range, AVEVA PI Vision adds an icon to the X-axis label in
the table, and a tooltip shows the time range.
b. In the table of attributes, select the row that corresponds to the data pair you want to
format.
c. Set the properties to identify the data pair in the plot. For example, you can set color,
marker style and color, and lines.
Zoom in on an XY plot
The Zoom feature allows you to zoom in on a particular range of time and value in an XY plot
on your display.
Since an XY plot does not compare a symbol attribute against type, Zoom allows you to get a
closer look at the data you are comparing within each axis's individual scale.
Procedure
1. Exit Design mode by clicking .
2. Once you are out of Design mode, right-click your XY plot and then click Zoom In.
3. Once your XY plot has zoomed in, right-click it again and select Zoom In to continue to zoom
in on your XY plot, select Zoom Out to back your zoom out by one, or select Reset to return
your XY plot to the default view.
Note:
To undo your last zoom action on an XY plot, use the keyboard shortcut CTRL+Z.
Note:
To sort the data in columns in numerical or alphabetical order, click a column heading.
Clicking the column heading more than once reverses the sort order. To change the order
of columns, select a column and drag it to another column inside the table.
Administrators can set the default configuration for asset comparison table symbols across all
displays. Defaults do not include data item level configurations or custom label text. For more
information about display defaults, see the AVEVA PI Vision Administration Guide (https://
docs.osisoft.com/bundle/pi-vision/page/aveva-pi-vision-administration-tasks.html).
Procedure
1. To add an asset comparison table to a display, select the asset comparison table symbol
from the Symbol Gallery.
2. Drag and drop one or more assets, attributes, or AF calculation values or summaries from
the search results onto the display.
Data from the same asset is organized on the same row.
3. Drag and drop additional assets to automatically create new rows with existing attribute
columns.
4. Drag and drop additional attributes to perform the following:
◦ Create new attribute columns for all assets in the table.
◦ Create new asset rows if the additional attributes belong to new assets.
5. Drag and drop additional AF calculation values or summaries to create new columns in the
table.
Procedure
1. Right-click the table and then click Configure Table to open the Configure Table pane.
2. Under Columns, customize the attribute columns:
◦ To add an attribute column to the table, select the attribute in the Additional Attributes
list and click the up arrow.
◦ To remove an attribute column from the table, select the attribute in the Current Columns
list and click the down arrow.
◦ To change the units of measurement for a column, in the Units field, select the units from
the drop-down list. Only units appropriate for conversion from the base unit are listed.
◦ To show the units of measurement in a column, click a column in the list and select the
Show Units check box.
Tip:
To change the order of the columns, select a column's header in the table and drag it to
another column.
3. Under Numbers, customize the format of numbers in the table.
Format Description
Database Show numbers in a format that depends on the data item:
◦ For PI points or PI AF attributes with a PI point data reference, the
format depends on the value of the point's DisplayDigits
attribute:
▪ Zero or positive numbers specify the number of digits to display to
the right of the decimal point.
▪ Negative numbers specify the number of significant digits.
◦ For PI AF attributes without a PI point data reference, numbers show
5 significant digits.
All data items show the thousands separator.
General Show all significant digits for numbers except for trailing zeros. If the
absolute value of the number is greater than 1x10^7 or less than 1x10^-5,
the format will switch to use scientific notation.
Number Show numbers in the custom format that you specify:
◦ Decimal Places
The number of digits shown after the decimal.
◦ Use 1000 separator
Select this check box to show the thousands separator in large
numbers.
Scientific Show numbers in the format 0.00E+00.
Note:
You must have administrator privileges to save defaults.
Procedure
1. Right-click the existing symbol you want to change and click Switch symbol to.
2. From the sub-menu, select the new desired symbol type.
Note:
Multi-data item symbols like trends or tables can only transition into other multi-data
item symbols. For example, tables can transition to trends and trends to tables. If a
trend or a table only has one data item, then it can transition to any other symbol.
Procedure
1. To select multiple symbols on your display, you can:
◦ Click an empty area of the screen, hold down the mouse button, and drag your cursor
over the section of the display that contains the symbols you want to select.
◦ Hold CTRL and click on each of the symbols you want to select.
To select all the symbols on the display at once, press CTRL + A.
2. To group selected symbols into a single object, right-click one of the selected symbols and
click Group Symbols.
You can move the group by clicking anywhere inside the group.
3. Once you group objects on the display, you can:
◦ Select and edit any individual symbol inside the group by click the group and then
clicking the symbol you want to select.
◦ Save the group by saving the display.
◦ Move the group in Design mode by dragging the object anywhere on the display.
4. To ungroup the symbols, right-click the group and click Ungroup Symbols
Note:
This feature is not available in Design mode.
Procedure
1. Double-click any data symbol on your display to open a popup trend.
Note:
If the symbol contains a hyperlink, clicking the symbol takes you to the link and does
not open the popup trend. To open the popup trend for a linked symbol, right-click it
and click Drill In > Popup Trend. To learn more about hyperlinks in symbols, see Add a
navigation link to a symbol.
2. Click inside an opened popup trend to view trend cursors. You can also use a trend zoom
and pan across the popup trend's time range by dragging the lower section of the trend left
or right.
3. Click Back to return to your original display.
Ad Hoc Workspace
The Ad Hoc Workspace is the area where you can view and explore the trends of the data you
select for analysis. You can interact with the trend by setting up the trend scales to see the right
view of data, using cursors to view values at specific times, and changing the time range of the
trend.
Procedure
1. Right-click a symbol or data item and then click Add Selection to Ad Hoc. The menu options
differ depending on the type of data item as shown in this table:
Data type Selection that can be added to ad hoc
Table Single row, attribute from all table assets
Trend Trace
Asset Comparison Table Table cell, attribute from all table assets
Collection Symbol, attribute from all collection assets
Symbol with data Symbol
Search pane Attributes
Events pane Attributes
The number badge on the Show Ad Hoc shows the number of data sources that were added
to the Ad Hoc Workspace since the last time it was opened.
Procedure
1. To start the Ad Hoc Workspace, click Show Ad Hoc . AVEVA PI Vision displays the Ad
Hoc Workspace.
2. To modify the Ad Hoc Workspace scales independently from the trend data sources, use the
scale controls . For more information about each scale
options.
4. To revert the last change you made to the Ad Hoc Workspace, click Undo . To revert the
5. To display the data plot only, click Hide summary table . To unhide the Summary table,
click it again.
6. To add the items on the Ad Hoc Workspace to a new display in AVEVA PI Vision, click
Convert to Display . For more information, see Convert ad hoc trend to a display.
7. To generate a link that you can share with other members of your organization who have
access to AVEVA PI Vision, click Share Ad Hoc Display . For more information, see Share
an ad hoc trend.
8. For details about each ad hoc trend on the Ad Hoc Workspace, refer to the Summary table.
For more information about each column in the Summary table, see Summary table.
9. To return to the original AVEVA PI Vision display, click Hide .
Note:
Changing the plot option affects all ad hoc trends in the Ad Hoc Workspace.
Procedure
1. Add a data item to the Ad Hoc Workspace. For more information, see Create an ad hoc trend.
2. If the summary table is not already enabled, click Show summary table .
3. Click one (or multiple) summary trace options for Average, Minimum, or Maximum in the
summary table.
◦ Step: Displays a stepped-line trace where the interval is specified as a length of time that
defines the length of the step on the Time axis. For example, a one-hour trend with a Step
interval of 1 minute displays 60 one-minute intervals.
◦ Count: Displays a single-line trace where the middle of one interval connects to the
middle of the next interval. The length of each interval is equal to the total time range for
the trend divided by the Count you specify. For example, a one-hour trend with a Count
setting of 120 displays 120 30-second intervals.
6. Click Apply.
Procedure
1. To hide the Ad Hoc Workspace, click the hide icon .
Summary table
By default, data source information is summarized in a table shown below the trend. The
summary table shows one row per trace. Click to hide or show the summary table. When
the summary table is hidden, the data items are shown in a legend on the right side of the
trend.
Column Name Column Description
Name The name as defined for the PI AF attribute, PI tag,
or Calculation added to the ad hoc trend.
Description The description field as defined in the PI AF
attribute, PI tag, or calculation added to the ad hoc
trend.
Value The current value for the ad hoc trend based on
the given time period in the time bar.
Units The units configured for the PI AF attribute, PI tag,
or Calculation added to the ad hoc trend.
Average The average of the values for the data item or
expression added to the ad hoc trend for the given
time period in the time bar.
Minimum The lowest data value present for the data item or
expression added to the ad hoc trend for the given
time period in the time bar.
Maximum The highest data value present for the data item or
expression added to the ad hoc trend for the given
time period in the time bar.
Bottom The lowest number visible on the y-axis for the ad
hoc trend. This is an editable field.
Top The highest number visible on the y-axis for the ad
hoc trend. This is an editable field.
Summary data is shown for the time range of the ad hoc trend. Summary data shows the
current value at the reference time (typically end time) of the trend time range, and the
average, minimum, and maximum value over the time range. A summary table can be
customized by inputting new values in its editable fields.
Procedure
1. Click The Share Ad Hoc Display field fills with the ad hoc trend's URL.
2. Click Copy. The URL is copied and can be pasted as is, or can have parameters added or
modified. For example:
https://serverx/pivision/#/Displays/adhoc?dataItems=\\pi
\SINUSOID&startTime=2019-04-22T12:16:12.447Z&endTime=2019-04-22T20:16:1
2.447Z&symbol=trend;multipleScales%3Dtrue
Calculations
AVEVA PI Vision calculations are simple mathematical expressions on PI points or attributes
that can be performed as needed and the results can be used to analyze processes in real-time.
This includes basic arithmetic calculations and summary calculations, such as minimum,
maximum, and average, on data items within the display.
For example, you could use calculations to compare the difference in pressure between two (2)
pieces of equipment. Calculations enable an operator or engineer to calculate these values
immediately and eliminate the need to create a calculation in AF Analytics that may not be used
again.
Use the Calculation Editor window to create, edit, or delete Calculations.
Create a Calculation
When you create a calculation, you can manually define your own expression based on either
PI points or assets, or you can create a calculation from one or more existing symbols on a
display. To create a calculation from one more symbols on your display, see Create a calculation
based on symbols in a display. All PI points in a calculation must be from the same Data
Archive. Assets in a calculation must be from the same AF database. You cannot use both PI
points and assets in the same expression.
To manually define a calculation, perform the following steps:
Procedure
1. On the left side of the screen, click Calculations and then click Add Calculation .
4. Configure the Expression to calculate the data you need. Expressions can include tag
variables with mathematical and logical operations. See Built-in performance equation
functions (https://docs.osisoft.com/bundle/pi-server/page/built-in-performance-
equation-functions.html) for additional information.
Examples:
◦ ‘sinusoid’ * 2
◦ (‘cdt158’+‘sinusoid’)/2
◦ log(‘cdt158’)
◦ (‘sinusoid’)/tagspan(‘sinusoid’)
Drag and drop a PI point or attribute from the Assets pane into the Expression to include it
in the calculation. When a data source can be successfully dropped in the expression, it is
outlined in green.
By default, all data sources are added to the calculation with the + operator.
5. To change the asset context, drag and drop it from the Assets pane into the field next to the
calculation basis buttons. When a data source can be successfully dropped in the field, it is
outlined in green.
Note:
If the calculation is created in a display that has an asset context, that asset context is
used as the default asset context for the calculation.
6. Click Preview to test the expression with data available at the current time.
7. Click Advanced Options to further configure the calculation.
8. Configure the Time Interval for the calculation. By default, this is set to Auto, but you can
choose a Custom Time Interval if needed.
If you set the Time Interval to Auto:
◦ Set the Total Conversion Factor for the calculation. This only applies to the Total
summary Column.
◦ Click Stepped Plot to display this calculation with stepped data.
◦ Set the Calc Interval for the calculation. The Calc Interval is the time range for which the
data calculation is performed.
◦ Set the Sync Time for the calculation. The Sync Time is the time of day (in 24-hour
format) from which Calc Intervals are counted.
◦ Set the Total Conversion Factor for the calculation. The Total Conversion Factor is used
as a time basis for time-weighted totals. This only applies to the Total summary Column.
◦ Click Stepped Plot to display the calculation with stepped data.
Procedure
1. Select the symbols to include in the calculation. Hold the Ctrl key and click on each symbol.
Note:
Selected symbols must be based on either PI tags or AF attributes, but not both.
2. Click Calculations, and then click Add Calculation With Selected Symbols. The number
above the icon indicates how many PI tags or AF attributes will be included in the
calculation. The number only appears when all symbols on the display, not just the selected
symbols, are the same type: either PI tags or AF attributes.
3. In the Calculation Editor window, enter a Name and a Description for the calculation.
Note:
The calculation Name needs to be unique for the current display. You may reuse a
Calculation Name on different displays.
4. Configure the expression to calculate the data you need, and then click Preview to test the
expression with the data currently available.
◦ Set the Total Conversion Factor for the calculation. This only applies to the Total
summary Column.
◦ Click Stepped Plot to display the calculation with stepped data.
◦ Set the Calc Interval for the calculation. The Calc Interval is the time range for which the
data calculation is performed.
◦ Set the Sync Time for the calculation. The Sync Time is the time of day (in 24-hour
format) from which Calc Intervals are counted.
◦ Set the Total Conversion Factor for the calculation. The Total Conversion Factor is used
as a time basis for time-weighted totals. This only applies to the Total summary Column.
◦ Click Stepped Plot to display the calculation with stepped data.
Calculation syntax
Writing a calculation expression is similar to writing an expression in arithmetic. You can use
any of the standard arithmetic operators (such as +, -, and *) in an expression.
As with arithmetic expressions, the building blocks of a calculation expression are operands
and operators. Operators act on operands. A basic expression takes the form: operand
operator operand as shown in the following table:
Operand Operator Operand Resulting expression
'TagA' + 'TagB' TagA plus the value of TagB
You can construct more complex expressions, just as you can in arithmetic. Operations are
performed in the same order as they would be performed in a mathematical expression.
Use parentheses to group expressions that you want to evaluate first.
The following example evaluates as the sum of the values of 'TagA' and 'TagB', divided by the
difference of 3 minus 'TagC':
('TagA' + 'TagB')/(3 - 'TagC')
This next example is TagA divided by the sum of TagA and TagB:
'TagA'/('TagA' + 'TagB')
More complex expressions for tag-based calculations are also possible. For additional details,
see Performance equations (PE) syntax and functions reference (https://docs.osisoft.com/
bundle/pi-server/page/performance-equations-pe-syntax-and-functions-reference.html) in
the PI Server documentation.
For asset-based calculations, you can drag and drop AF attributes into the expression editor in
the Calculations window. You can drag and drop an asset into the window to set the asset
context, but this does not change the expression. Attributes must be from the same database.
If you drag an attribute into a calculation that does not have an asset context, the asset context
is set to the element that contains the first attribute. If asset context is already set, an attribute
at or below the current context's level is converted to a relative path. Attributes at the same or
higher hierarchy level are shown as paths relative to the root of the AF database.
Examples:
AttributeA is dragged into the editor and the asset context is set to Element1. If AttributeB is
from Element1, then the syntax will look like:
('AttributeA' + 'AttributeB')/(3 - 'AttributeA')
If AttributeB is from another element in the AF hierarchy, a partial path is included in the
syntax:
('AttributeA' + ‘\Grandparent1\Parent1\Element2|AttributeB’/(3 - 'AttributeA')
More complex expressions for asset-based calculations are also possible. For additional details,
see Expression functions reference (https://docs.osisoft.com/bundle/pi-server/page/
expression-functions-reference.html) in the PI Server documentation. Expressions that require
a specified time interval are not supported.
Procedure
1. Click the symbol (or symbols) on the display whose data source you want to add to a
calculation.
2. Click Calculations .
3. Right-click the calculation that you want to modify and then click Add Selected Symbols to
Calculation.
4. Make any additional modifications to the calculation as needed and then click Save.
Note:
If you drag an attribute into a calculation that does not have an asset context, the asset
context is set to the element that contains the first attribute. If asset context is already
set, an attribute at the current context level or below is converted to a relative path.
Attributes at the same or higher hierarchy level are shown as paths relative to the root
of the AF database.
If the asset is moved or renamed, the asset context is updated when the calculation
editor is opened. The updated calculation needs to be saved with the new name or
path.
Procedure
1. On the left side of the screen, click Calculations .
◦ The StdDev function calculates the standard deviation over the time range.
◦ The Range function calculates the range of values over the time range (Maximum-
Minimum).
◦ The Total function calculates the time-weighted total of the expression over the time
range. Uses the Total Conversion Factor as a basis for the Calculation.
Because the Average, StdDev, and PercentGood functions are time-weighted, their calculated
values include the tag value at the lower interval boundary time but exclude the tag value at
the upper interval boundary time. For the example above, the tag value 11 at time 1:10:00 is
excluded in the function calculation; therefore, the calculated value for Average is 5.5 and the
calculated value for StdDev is 2.872281.
The calculated values for the Minimum, Maximum, and Range, which are event-weighted
functions, include the tag values of both the lower and upper interval boundary times. For the
example above, the calculated value for Minimum is 1, the calculated value for Maximum is 11,
and the calculated value for Range is 10.
Multi-state behaviors
With multi-state behaviors, you can transform certain objects on a display into visual alarms.
Objects configured with multi-states alter their color based on changing data values. Multi-
state configuration assigns specific colors to ranges of values, corresponding to process states.
When the data value of a multi-state object enters the assigned range, its color changes to
indicate a different state.
You configure the number of value ranges (states), the maximum for each range, and the color
for each range. When setting the color, you can also set the object to blink. When the data value
enters a different value range, the multi-state object changes its color to match the
configuration. You can make a multi-state object invisible by setting the color to the display's
background color. You can also assign a color for data in bad status (for example, a maximum
permissible level). The site administrator can set the default color palette and the default color
for data in bad status. For more information, see the PI Vision Installation and Administration
Guide.
For example, suppose you have a multi-state object that has two states. State 1 has a value
range from 0 to 50 assigned the color blue. State 2 has a range from 50 to 100 assigned the
color red. When the value reads 50 or below, the symbol appears blue; above 50, the symbol
appears red.
Note:
To configure multi-state behaviors for limit attribute traits, at least two attribute traits
must be enabled in PI System Explorer. Note that the minimum and maximum limit
attribute traits override the zero and span PI point attributes, respectively, which are set
in PI System Management Tools (SMT). For more information, see the PI Server topic
Attribute traits (https://docs.osisoft.com/bundle/pi-server/page/attribute-traits.html).
The following objects support multi-state behaviors:
• Value symbols
• Bar charts
• Gauge symbols
• Asset comparison tables
• Event tables
• Shapes
• Images
• Text
Note:
If digital states or enumeration sets used in a multi-state are changed, you may see stale
States on a display until you Refresh. To check whether you need to Refresh the Multi-
State Source for a symbol, right-click it and then click Configure Multi-state. If you see a
Refresh button after the list of States, the Multi-State Source data for this symbol is
outdated. Click Refresh to incorporate the latest available State names into the symbol.
Videos
For more on this topic, watch the following video:
https://youtube.com/watch?v=EXih8i7d3oU
Procedure
1. Right-click a gauge symbol on the display, and then click either Add Multi-State or
Configure Multi-State to open the Multi-State pane. If needed, add or replace the attribute
or calculation that the multi-state is based on.
a. Find an attribute in the Assets pane, or find or create a calculation in the Calculations
pane.
b. Drag the attribute or calculation to the top of the Configure Multi-State section.
For the attribute represented by the symbol, this section shows available states and their
associated colors. States correspond to:
◦ Traits if the attribute has limit traits
Limit traits for attributes are configured in PI System Explorer. For more information, see
the PI Server topic Attribute traits (https://docs.osisoft.com/bundle/pi-server/page/
attribute-traits.html).
◦ Digital states if the attribute stores digital state values
The Bad data state indicates that a value is either out of range or contains no data.
2. If the pane lists configurable numeric conditions, set the conditions to define each state:
a. For each condition, enter the maximum value for the condition.
The state applies when the value is greater than the previous condition and less than or
equal to this value. The units for the values are displayed above the conditions. If the
datasource is the symbol and you change the units for the symbol, click Convert units to
convert the values to the new units.
b. To remove a condition, click X next to the condition.
c. To add a condition, type a maximum value in the empty field below Bad data and then
click Add.
3. Set the colors for each state:
a. Select the color to open the color palette.
b. Select the color for the state. You can also select a transparent fill.
c. Select Hide to hide the symbol when the value reaches this condition.
Note:
While you are in Design mode, hidden symbols remain visible on a display, but are
hidden once you exit Design mode.
d. Select Blink if you want the symbol to blink for this state.
Note:
Blink is not supported for hidden symbols.
Results
The symbol changes its color based on the current attribute value and the colors configured for
the multi-state. If the units configured on the symbol are changed, you can either leave the
multi-state values as defined or click Convert Units to convert the current values to the new
units.
Procedure
1. Right-click a value symbol on the display, and then click either Add Multi-State or Configure
Multi-State to open the Multi-State pane. Add or replace the attribute that the multi-state is
based on.
a. Find an attribute in the Assets pane.
b. Drag the attribute to the top of the Configure Multi-State section.
For the attribute represented by the symbol, this section shows available states and their
associated colors. States correspond to:
◦ Traits if the attribute has limit traits
Limit traits for attributes are configured in PI System Explorer. For more information, see
the PI Server topic Attribute traits (https://docs.osisoft.com/bundle/pi-server/page/
attribute-traits.html).
◦ Digital states if the attribute stores digital state values
The Bad data state indicates that a value is either out of range or contains no data.
2. Configure the Property section to determine which symbol attribute should display the
multi-state settings. Options include:
◦ Fill: Applies multi-state conditions to the background Fill attribute for the value symbol
◦ Value: Applies multi-state conditions to the Value attribute for the value symbol
◦ All Text: Applies multi-state conditions to any visible text for the value symbol
3. If the pane lists configurable numeric conditions, set the conditions to define each state:
a. For each condition, enter the maximum value for the condition.
The state applies when the value is greater than the previous condition and less than or
equal to this value. The units for the values are displayed above the conditions. If the
datasource is the symbol and you change the units for the symbol, click Convert units to
convert the values to the new units.
b. To remove a condition, click X next to the condition.
c. To add a condition, type a maximum value in the empty field below Bad data and then
click Add.
4. Set the colors desired for each state:
a. Select the color to open the color palette.
b. Select the desired color for the state. You can also select a transparent fill.
c. Select Hide to hide the symbol when the value reaches this condition.
Note:
In Design mode, hidden symbols remain visible on a display, but are hidden once
you exit Design mode.
d. Select Blink if you want the symbol to blink for this state.
Note:
Blink is not supported for hidden symbols.
Results
The symbol changes its color based on the current attribute value and the colors configured for
the multi-state. If the units configured on the symbol are changed, you can either leave the
multi-state values as defined or click Convert Units to convert the current values to the new
units.
Procedure
1. Right-click a bar chart symbol on the display, and then click either Add Multi-State or Bands
or Configure Multi-State to open the Multi-State pane.
2. In the Property field, select what part of the bar chart to apply the multi-state to.
◦ Bar Color - Each bar color is determined by the multi-state settings. You can set a Bad
data state with this option.
The Bad data state indicates that a value is either out of range or contains no data.
◦ Bands on Chart Area - The background area of the bar chart is set to bands of color
determined by the multi-state settings. The Bad data state is not available for this option.
◦ Value Scale Axis - A stripe of colored bands is shown next to the value scale axis,
where the colors are determined by the multi-state settings. The Bad data state is not
available for this option.
3. If the pane lists configurable numeric conditions, set the conditions to define each state:
a. For each condition, enter the maximum value for the condition.
The state applies when the value is greater than the previous condition and less than or
equal to this value. The units for the values are displayed above the conditions. If the
datasource is the symbol and you change the units for the symbol, click Convert units to
convert the values to the new units.
b. To remove a condition, click X next to the condition.
c. To add a condition, type a maximum value in the empty field below Bad data and then
click Add.
4. Set the colors for each state:
a. Select the color to open the color palette.
b. Select the color for the state. You can also select a transparent fill.
c. Select Hide to hide the symbol when the value reaches this condition.
Note:
While you are in Design mode, hidden symbols remain visible on a display, but are
hidden once you exit Design mode.
d. Select Blink if you want the symbol to blink for this state.
Note:
Blink is not supported for hidden symbols.
Results
The bar chart shows the configured multi-state colors.
Procedure
1. Right-click an asset-comparison-table symbol on the display, and then click either Add
Multi-State or Configure Multi-State to open the Multi-State pane.
Limit traits for attributes are configured in PI System Explorer. For more information, see
the PI Server topic Attribute traits (https://docs.osisoft.com/bundle/pi-server/page/
attribute-traits.html).
◦ Digital states if the attribute stores digital state values
The pane shows the available states for the attribute of the first row in the table.
The Bad data state indicates that a value is either out of range or contains no data, or that
the attribute value is incompatible with the configured states. For example, in columns that
contain attributes configured for limit traits, attributes without traits always appear in the
Bad data state.
3. If the pane lists configurable numeric conditions, set the conditions to define each state:
a. For each condition, enter the maximum value for the condition.
The state applies when the value is greater than the previous condition and less than or
equal to this value. The units for the values are displayed above the conditions. If the
datasource is the symbol and you change the units for the symbol, click Convert units to
convert the values to the new units.
b. To remove a condition, click X next to the condition.
c. To add a condition, type a maximum value in the empty field below Bad data and then
click Add.
4. Set the colors desired for each state:
a. Select the color to open the color palette.
b. Select the color for the state. You can also select a transparent fill.
c. Select Hide to hide the symbol when the value reaches this condition.
Note:
While you are in Design mode, hidden symbols remain visible on a display, but are
hidden once you exit Design mode.
d. Select Blink if you want the symbol to blink for this state.
Note:
Blink is not supported for hidden symbols.
Results
Each cell in the selected column changes its color based on the current attribute value and the
colors configured for the multi-state. If the units configured for a column are changed, you can
either leave the multi-state values as defined or click Convert Units to convert the current
values to the new units.
Procedure
1. Right-click an event comparison table symbol on the display, and then click either Add
Multi-State or Configure Multi-State to open the Multi-State pane.
The pane lists the current columns in the table.
2. From the Current Columns list, select the column to configure, and then select the Enable
Multi-State check box.
For the attribute in the selected column, the pane shows available states and their
associated colors. States correspond to:
◦ Traits if the attribute has limit traits
Limit traits for attributes are configured in PI System Explorer. For more information, see
the PI Server topic Attribute traits (https://docs.osisoft.com/bundle/pi-server/page/
attribute-traits.html).
◦ Digital states if the attribute stores digital state values
The pane shows the available states for the attribute of the first row in the table.
The Bad data state indicates that a value is either out of range or contains no data, or that
the attribute value is incompatible with the configured states. For example, in columns that
contain attributes configured for limit traits, attributes without traits always appear in the
Bad data state.
3. If the pane lists configurable numeric conditions, set the conditions to define each state:
a. For each condition, enter the maximum value for the condition.
The state applies when the value is greater than the previous condition and less than or
equal to this value. The units for the values are displayed above the conditions. If the
datasource is the symbol and you change the units for the symbol, click Convert units to
convert the values to the new units.
b. To remove a condition, click X next to the condition.
c. To add a condition, type a maximum value in the empty field below Bad data and then
click Add.
4. Set the colors desired for each state:
a. Select the color to open the color palette.
b. Select the color for the state. You can also select a transparent fill.
c. Select Hide to hide the symbol when the value reaches this condition.
Note:
While you are in Design mode, hidden symbols remain visible on a display, but are
hidden once you exit Design mode.
d. Select Blink if you want the symbol to blink for this state.
Note:
Blink is not supported for hidden symbols.
Results
Each cell in the selected column changes its color based on the current attribute value and the
colors configured for the multi-state.
Note:
You cannot use some types of data attributes to configure multi-states. For example, you
cannot use text attributes because the list of possible values is not known. If the list of
possible string values is limited, you can consider converting the data to a digital state
set.
Procedure
1. Right-click the object on the display, and then click Configure Multi-State to open the Multi-
State pane.
2. Add or replace the attribute that the multi-state is based on.
a. Find an attribute in the Assets pane.
b. Drag the attribute to the top of the Configure Multi-State pane.
For the selected attribute, the pane shows available states and their associated colors. States
correspond to:
◦ Traits if the attribute has limit traits
Limit traits for attributes are configured in PI System Explorer. For more information, see
the PI Server topic Attribute traits (https://docs.osisoft.com/bundle/pi-server/page/
attribute-traits.html).
◦ Digital states if the attribute stores digital state values
The Bad data state indicates that a value is either out of range or contains no data.
3. If the pane lists configurable numeric conditions, set the conditions to define each state:
a. For each condition, enter the maximum value for the condition.
The state applies when the value is greater than the previous condition and less than or
equal to this value. The units for the values are displayed above the conditions. If the
datasource is the symbol and you change the units for the symbol, click Convert units to
convert the values to the new units.
b. To remove a condition, click X next to the condition.
c. To add a condition, type a maximum value in the empty field below Bad data and then
click Add.
4. Set the colors desired for each state:
a. Select the color to open the color palette.
b. Select the color for the state. You can also select a transparent fill.
c. Select Hide to hide the symbol when the value reaches this condition.
Note:
While you are in Design mode, hidden symbols remain visible on a display, but are
hidden once you exit Design mode.
d. Select Blink if you want the symbol to blink for this state.
Note:
Blink is not supported for hidden symbols.
Results
The shape or image changes its color based on the current attribute value and the colors
configured for the multi-state.
Procedure
1. Right-click a text label on the display, and then click either Add Multi-State or Configure
Multi-State to open the Multi-State pane. Add or replace the attribute that the multi-state is
based on.
a. Find an attribute in the Assets pane.
b. Drag the attribute to the top of the Configure Multi-State section.
For the attribute represented by the symbol, this section shows available states and their
associated colors. States correspond to:
◦ Traits if the attribute has limit traits
Limit traits for attributes are configured in PI System Explorer. For more information, see
the PI Server topic Attribute traits (https://docs.osisoft.com/bundle/pi-server/page/
attribute-traits.html).
◦ Digital states if the attribute stores digital state values
The Bad data state indicates that a value is either out of range or contains no data.
2. Configure the Property section to determine which symbol attribute should display the
multi-state settings. Options include:
◦ Fill: Applies multi-state conditions to the background Fill attribute for the text label
◦ Text: Applies multi-state conditions to the Text attribute for the text label
3. If the pane lists configurable numeric conditions, set the conditions to define each state:
a. For each condition, enter the maximum value for the condition.
The state applies when the value is greater than the previous condition and less than or
equal to this value. The units for the values are displayed above the conditions. If the
datasource is the symbol and you change the units for the symbol, click Convert units to
convert the values to the new units.
b. To remove a condition, click X next to the condition.
c. To add a condition, type a maximum value in the empty field below Bad data and then
click Add.
4. Set the colors desired for each state:
a. Select the color to open the color palette.
b. Select the color for the state. You can also select a transparent fill.
c. Select Hide to hide the symbol when the value reaches this condition.
Note:
While you are in Design mode, hidden symbols remain visible on a display, but are
hidden once you exit Design mode.
d. Select Blink if you want the symbol to blink for this state.
Note:
Blink is not supported for hidden symbols.
Results
The symbol changes its color based on the current attribute value and the colors configured for
the multi-state.
To set this type of asset context, click Use current asset as root in the Add Navigation Link pane.
Note:
The assets passed to a target display with the Use current asset as root option should be
at the same or parallel nodes in the PI AF hierarchy and have identically named
hierarchies of child assets.
Training Video
For more on this topic, watch the following video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?
v=MUwyB70KH1Q&list=PLMcG1Hs2JbcvWPkSbIbQEJqsTX9Sa1nty
Procedure
1. Right-click the object where you want to add a link, and then click Add Navigation Link to
open the Add Navigation Link pane.
2. (Optional) To have the link change the asset context of the symbols on your current display,
select the Change context of current display check box (under Action).
By selecting this option, you can double-click linked symbols that contain different assets
and change the asset context of the symbols without links on your current display.
Note:
You can use an asset comparison table or a collection with linked assets to change the
asset context of the symbols on your current display.
3. To add a URL link to an external website, enter the URL in the Hyperlink field. (To open the
external website in a separate browser tab, select Open in a New Tab check box.)
Note:
For security reasons, by default, you can only enter http: and https: protocols for
external websites or ./# and # for displays. An administrator can override these
security settings. For more information, see the AVEVA PI Vision administration topic
Override the security settings for navigational links (https://docs.osisoft.com/
bundle/pi-vision/page/override-the-security-settings-for-navigation-links.html).
4. To add a link to another display, click Search for Displays.
a. Enter the display name or owner in the Search field and click .
Tip:
Use wildcards such as asterisks (*) when you do not know all the letters in the
name.
AVEVA PI Vision lists all displays with your searched keywords.
b. Select the display you want to link to.
5. If you want the target display to automatically match the time context of the source display
that contains the link, select the Set Start and End Time check box.
6. If you want the target display to automatically match the asset context of the linked symbol
on the source display that contains the link, select the Set Asset Context check box and
specify how to pass the context.
◦ Select Use Current Asset to pass the asset context from a multi-asset display to a single
asset display.
◦ Select Use Current Asset as Root to pass the root portion of the asset path as context.
Use this option when the target display contains attributes of the source display asset as
well as the attributes of its child assets.
Note:
The top-level assets should be at the same or parallel nodes in the PI AF hierarchy
and have identical or very similar hierarchies of child assets.
For more information about passing the asset context, see Contextual navigation links.
7. (Optional) When working with a static symbol like a shape, an image, or text, you can
associate it with a desired asset by dragging the asset from the search results into the Asset
Context field in the lower half of the pane. To set the asset context for the object in order for
the target display to match the asset associated with the linked symbol, follow instructions
in the previous step.
8. To go to the link inside the symbol, exit Design mode. You can either double-click on the
linked symbol or right-click it, and then click Drill In > Navigation Link.
To view the data symbol in a separate display as a popup trend, right-click the linked
symbol, and then click Drill In > Popup Trend .
Symbol collection
A collection allows you to automatically find and see all similar assets on your display. With a
collection, you can choose one or more data symbols, including symbols using asset
calculations, and instantly view their related assets and attributes, without having to search for
each asset separately.
For example, say you have ten pumps in one plant. You can view the flow rate attribute of Pump
1 and then convert its symbol into a collection that automatically finds and shows the flow rate
for all ten pumps.
By changing the collection search criteria, you can customize your collection to view only those
assets whose parameters fall within a desired range or which are in a specific state. The
collection will update automatically as the parameters or state of the assets changes.
Note:
You can convert a symbol into a collection only if the symbol contains a PI AF attribute.
Training Video
For more on this topic, check out the following video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?
v=R8QPrNxCV1k&list=PLMcG1Hs2JbcvWPkSbIbQEJqsTX9Sa1nty
Create a collection
Select one or more symbols, images, or text to convert them into a collection.
Note:
You cannot convert an XY plot or events table into a collection. An asset comparison table
can only be converted into a single-symbol collection by adding dynamic search criteria.
See Add dynamic search criteria.
Procedure
1. Convert one or more symbols, images, or text into a collection:
◦ To convert a single symbol, right-click the symbol and click Convert to Collection.
◦ To convert multiple symbols, select the desired symbols by holding CTRL or by dragging
a selection box around them, and then right-click one of the selected symbols and click
Convert to Collection.
The collection replicates your selected objects for each related asset inside a separate
canvas, which you can scroll, move, or resize.
Note:
To resize the collection canvas, you must enter Design mode.
2. To change the search criteria for the collection, right-click the collection and then click Edit
Collection Criteria to open the Edit Collection Criteria pane.
3. To format the collection, right-click the collection and then click Format Collection to open
the Format Collection pane.
Procedure
1. Right-click the collection and then click Edit Collection Criteria to open the Edit Collection
Criteria pane.
2. Click the arrows to expand each search criteria and view more options.
You can refine your search by selecting the following:
a. Database
Select a single PI AF database that contains the assets you want to retrieve.
b. Search Root
Enter the "search root" asset in the asset hierarchy. A search root is any specified node of
an asset hierarchy. Once an asset is set as a search root, the collection only searches that
asset and its children, but will not search the data hierarchy above the search root. The
search root must consist of an asset hierarchy separated by backslashes, without
including the PI AF server and database. For example: Parent Asset\Child Asset
\Child Asset 2.
To see all the descendants of the asset, such as grandchild assets, select the Return All
Descendants check box.
Note:
If you do not set the search root but select the Return All Descendants check box,
AVEVA PI Vision retrieves all the assets from the selected database.
c. Asset Name
Enter the name of a specific asset. Use wildcards, such as question marks (?) and
asterisks (*), to stand for single or multiple characters, respectively.
d. Asset Type
Find assets associated with a specific asset type and the values of up to five asset
attributes:
▪ Asset Type
Select an asset template. AVEVA PI Vision finds assets created from the selected
template.
▪ Asset Attribute
To find desired assets by their asset attributes, click the plus (+) sign, select an
attribute from the list, select an operator, and enter a value.
If the value type of the attribute is enumeration set or Boolean, then click the arrow to
select the value from a list. For more information, see the PI Server topic Enumeration
sets (https://docs.osisoft.com/bundle/pi-server/page/enumeration-sets-in-pi-
af.html).
For example, to see assets in the collection with temperature above 100 degrees,
select your asset type, select Temperature as the Attribute, then select > from the list,
and enter 100 in the value field.
Depending on the attribute type, you can select one of the following operators:
Operators Description
= Is equal to
≠ Is not equal to
< Less than
<= Less than or equals to
> Greater than
>= Greater than or equals to
In Include multiple, non-numeric text values separated by semicolons.
Note:
PI AF does not support searches of attributes with an integer value type and a
default UOM configured. See the PI Server topic Create attribute templates
(https://docs.osisoft.com/bundle/pi-server/page/create-attribute-
templates.html).
e. Asset Category
Select the asset category for the assets in the collection.
f. Number of Results
Enter the maximum number of assets you want to see in your collection.
g. Asset Order
Select the sort order for assets in the collection:
▪ Ascending by Name
Organize the assets in the collection in ascending alphabetical order (A to Z).
▪ Descending by Name
Organize the assets in the collection in descending alphabetical order (Z to A).
3. Click Refresh to perform the search.
Format a collection
Use the Format Collection pane to customize the collection's appearance and layout.
Procedure
1. Right-click the symbol collection and click Format Collection to open the Format Collection
pane.
2. You can customize the Style of the collection by setting the following:
a. Fill
Choose the background color for the collection canvas.
b. Customize the border.
Modify a collection
You can modify any object in the collection by adding a navigation link, configuring, moving or
deleting the object or by adding new objects to the collection.
Procedure
1. To modify the collection, right-click the collection and click Modify Collection.
The collection switches to Modify mode and displays your symbols inside a stencil, showing
one set of symbols for a single asset. The objects on the display that are outside of the
modified collection are grayed out.
2. Once the collection is in Modify mode, you can change it by performing one or more of the
following:
◦ Search for data and add new data symbols to the collection.
Note:
You cannot add an asset comparison table, events table, or XY plot, which are
disabled in Modify mode.
◦ Switch symbol types.
Procedure
1. To add dynamic search criteria, right-click the symbol and select Add Dynamic Search
Criteria.
2. In the Search Criteria pane, click the arrows to expand each search criteria and view more
options.
You can refine your search by selecting the following:
a. Database
Select a single PI AF database that contains the assets you want to retrieve.
b. Search Root
Enter the "search root" asset in the asset hierarchy. A search root is any specified node of
an asset hierarchy. Once an asset is set as a search root, the collection only searches that
asset and its children, but will not search the data hierarchy above the search root. The
search root must consist of an asset hierarchy separated by backslashes, without
including the PI AF server and database. For example: Parent Asset\Child Asset
\Child Asset 2.
To see all the descendants of the asset, such as grandchild assets, select the Return All
Descendants check box.
Note:
If you do not set the search root but select the Return All Descendants check box,
AVEVA PI Vision retrieves all the assets from the selected database.
c. Asset Name
Enter the name of a specific asset. Use wildcards, such as question marks (?) and
asterisks (*), to stand for single or multiple characters, respectively.
d. Asset Type
Find assets associated with a specific asset type and the values of up to five asset
attributes:
▪ Asset Type
Select an asset template. AVEVA PI Vision finds assets created from the selected
template.
▪ Asset Attribute
To find desired assets by their asset attributes, click the plus (+) sign, select an
attribute from the list, select an operator, and enter a value.
If the value type of the attribute is enumeration set or Boolean, then click the arrow to
select the value from a list. For more information, see the PI Server topic Enumeration
sets (https://docs.osisoft.com/bundle/pi-server/page/enumeration-sets-in-pi-
af.html).
For example, to see assets in the collection with temperature above 100 degrees,
select your asset type, select Temperature as the Attribute, then select > from the list,
and enter 100 in the value field.
Depending on the attribute type, you can select one of the following operators:
Operators Description
= Is equal to
≠ Is not equal to
< Less than
<= Less than or equals to
> Greater than
>= Greater than or equals to
In Include multiple, non-numeric text values separated by semicolons.
Note:
PI AF does not support searches of attributes with an integer value type and a
default UOM configured. See the PI Server topic Create attribute templates
(https://docs.osisoft.com/bundle/pi-server/page/create-attribute-
templates.html).
e. Asset Category
Select the asset category for the assets in the collection.
f. Number of Results
Enter the maximum number of assets you want to see in your collection.
g. Asset Order
Select the sort order for assets in the collection:
▪ Ascending by Name
Organize the assets in the collection in ascending alphabetical order (A to Z).
▪ Descending by Name
Organize the assets in the collection in descending alphabetical order (Z to A).
Excluded attributes
Assets created from a template can contain excluded attributes. When creating an instance of
an asset from a template, designers might choose to exclude some attributes. Excluded
attributes do not exist for a particular asset. For example, suppose a pump from manufacturer
A records a temperature, but a pump from manufacturer B does not record a temperature.
Designers can create a pump template with a temperature attribute, but exclude the attribute
from pump 1 made by manufacturer B.
AVEVA PI Vision handles excluded attributes automatically:
• In tables, AVEVA PI Vision hides rows of excluded attributes.
• In asset comparison tables, AVEVA PI Vision shows blank values for excluded attributes.
• In other symbols, AVEVA PI Vision shows "N/A" for excluded attributes.
• In symbols with multi-state, AVEVA PI Vision hides the symbol if multi-state is configured to
hide bad data.
• Create a display that focuses on a set of data and then quickly and easily share that display
with others across your organization.
• Send the URL for a shared display in an email or instant message so that another user could
view them in a read-only mode.
• Create an ad hoc display to present data that is not already predefined in a display. These
are often used to troubleshoot an active problem with an asset or process. You can view
data items from multiple displays showing different parts of an asset or process as they
trend over time instead of by only a current value on a process monitoring display.
editing toolbar. The editing toolbar allows you to add shapes, text, or images, as well as arrange
and align objects on the display.
To lock the display and start monitoring it, exit Design mode by clicking . Once you exit
Design mode, you can view trend cursors on any trend or pan across a trend's time range by
dragging it. When the display is not in Design mode, you can still make some changes to it, such
as adding data items to existing symbols or swapping related assets in symbols. See Monitor
displays.
Move an object
Move the pointer over the symbol. When the pointer becomes , click and drag the object
anywhere on the display.
Resize an object
To increase or decrease the size of an object, select it and drag its sizing handle away from or
toward its center. To set the precise size of value or text objects, right-click and then click
Format Value or Format Text or Format Symbols; in the pane, select the desired size in the
Font Size list.
Snap to grid
To align objects to a grid, click Snap to Grid on the editing toolbar. With snap to grid
turned on, when you move an object or group of objects, the top-most and left-most points of
the object or the group align to the nearest points on the grid. If you resize an object with snap
to grid on, the object size snaps to points on the grid. To override snap to grid without turning
it off, hold the Alt key while you move an object.
To set options for snap to grid, click the arrow on the editing toolbar. The following
options are available:
• Use Snap to Grid to turn snap to grid on or off.
• Use the Size slider to set the size of the grid.
• Use Show Guide to turn the guide dots on the display on or off.
• Use the Spacing slider to set the appearance of the guide dots.
Delete an object
Select the shape you want to delete and press either Delete or Backspace or click on the
editing toolbar.
tool.
Note:
You must first put your display into Design mode before the Draw Shape tool
provides you with five shape options, each with a unique set of controls:
1. Rectangle
2. Ellipse
3. Line
4. Arc
5. Polygon
For details about the shape type controls, refer to the subsequent topics in this section.
Procedure
1. Click Modify Display to enter Design mode.
2. Click the Draw Shape tool and then click the rectangle.
3. Click the background of the display, drag the cursor until the rectangle reaches the desired
size, and then release the mouse button.
Note:
If you hold down the Shift key while dragging any of the rectangle's handles, it will
scale proportionally.
4. Move the rectangle on the display or resize it by using the sizing handles. Combine multiple
shapes to create diagrams and drawings.
Note:
To select multiple shapes, use the Ctrl key in combination with the left mouse button.
5. To format the rectangle, right-click it and click Format Shape to open the Format Shape
pane. You can update the following settings for a rectangle:
◦ Fill: Use this option to update the background color for the rectangle with a built-in color,
a custom color using hex code or the color picker, or a transparent background.
◦ Border: Use this option to update the border color for the rectangle with a built-in color, a
custom color with hex code or the color picker, or a transparent background.
◦ Weight: Use this option to increase or decrease the thickness of the rectangle's Border.
◦ Style: Use this option to change the border style for the rectangle from a solid line to one
of the dotted or dashed lines.
◦ Rotation: Drag the slider to the right to rotate the rectangle clockwise. Drag the slider to
the left to rotate the rectangle counterclockwise.
◦ Angle: To manually adjust the angle of rotation for the rectangle, enter a number
between 0 and 360.
Note:
This setting overrides any changes that you may have made to the Rotation setting.
6. To configure the Configure Multi-state and Add Navigation Link options for the rectangle,
click at the top of the Format Shape pane. For additional information, refer to Configure
multi-states for shapes and images and Add a navigation link to another display or website.
7. To close Design mode when you are finished editing the rectangle, click Modify Display
again.
Procedure
1. Click Modify Display to enter Design mode.
2. Click the Draw Shape tool and then click the ellipse.
3. Click the background of the display, drag the cursor until the ellipse reaches the desired size,
and then release the mouse button.
Note:
If you hold down the Shift key while dragging any of the ellipse's handles, it will scale
proportionally.
4. Move the ellipse on the display or resize it by using the sizing handles. Combine multiple
shapes to create diagrams and drawings.
Note:
To select multiple shapes, use the Ctrl key in combination with the left mouse button.
5. To format the ellipse, right-click it and click Format Shape to open the Format Shape pane.
You can update the following settings for an ellipse:
◦ Fill: Use this option to update the background color for the ellipse with a built-in color, a
custom color with hex code or the color picker, or a transparent background.
◦ Border: Use this option to update the border color for the ellipse with a built-in color, a
custom color with hex code or the color picker, or a transparent background.
◦ Weight: Use this option to increase or decrease the thickness of the ellipse's Border.
◦ Style: Use this option to change the border style for the ellipse from a solid line to one of
the dotted or dashed lines.
◦ Rotation: Drag the slider to the right to rotate the ellipse clockwise. Drag the slider to the
left to rotate the ellipse counterclockwise.
◦ Angle: To manually adjust the angle of rotation for the ellipse, enter a number between 0
and 360.
Note:
This setting overrides any changes that you may have made to the Rotation setting.
6. To configure the Configure Multi-state and Add Navigation Link options for the ellipse, click
at the top of the Format Shape pane. For additional information, refer to Configure multi-
states for shapes and images and Add a navigation link to another display or website.
7. To close Design mode when you are finished editing the ellipse, click Modify Display
again.
Procedure
1. Click Modify Display to enter Design mode.
2. Click the Draw Shape tool and then click the line.
3. Click the background of the display, drag the cursor until the line reaches the desired size,
and then release the mouse button.
Note:
If you hold down the Shift key while dragging either of the line's handles, it will rotate
in 45-degree angle increments as you move it.
4. Move the line on the display or resize it by using the sizing handles. Combine multiple
shapes to create diagrams and drawings.
Note:
To select multiple shapes, use the Ctrl key in combination with the left mouse button.
5. To format the line, right-click it and click Format Shape to open the Format Shape pane. You
can update the following settings for a line:
◦ Stroke: Use this option to update the color of the line with a built-in color, a custom color
with hex code or the color picker, or a transparent background.
◦ Weight: Use this option to increase or decrease the thickness of the line.
◦ Style: Use this option to change the type of line from a solid line to one of the dotted or
dashed lines.
◦ Arrows: Use this option to change the type of arrow on the end or ends of the line.
Note:
The default Arrows setting is to exclude arrows.
6. To configure the Configure Multi-state and Add Navigation Link options for the line, click
at the top of the Format Shape pane. For additional information, refer to Configure multi-
states for shapes and images and Add a navigation link to another display or website.
7. To close Design mode when you are finished editing the line, click Modify Display
again.
Procedure
1. Click Modify Display to enter Design mode.
2. Click the Draw Shape tool and then click the arc.
3. Click the background of the display, drag the cursor until the arc reaches the desired size,
and then release the mouse button.
Note:
If you hold down the Shift key while dragging any of the arc's handles, it will scale
proportionally.
4. Move the arc on the display or resize it by using the sizing handles. Combine multiple
shapes to create diagrams and drawings.
Note:
To select multiple shapes, use the Ctrl key in combination with the left mouse button.
5. To format the arc, right-click it and click Format Shape to open the Format Shape pane. You
can update the following settings for an arc:
◦ Fill: Use this option to update the interior color for the arc with a built-in color, a custom
color with hex code or the color picker, or a transparent background.
◦ Border: Use this option to update the outline color for the arc with a built-in color, a
custom color with hex code or the color picker, or a transparent background.
◦ Weight: Use this option to increase or decrease the thickness of the arc's Border.
◦ Style: Use this option to change the border style for the arc from a solid line to one of the
dotted or dashed lines.
◦ Rotation: Drag the slider to the right to rotate the arc clockwise. Drag the slider to the left
to rotate the arc counterclockwise.
◦ Angle: To manually adjust the angle of rotation for the arc, enter a number between 0
and 360.
Note:
This setting overrides any changes that you may have made to the Rotation setting.
6. To configure the Configure Multi-state and Add Navigation Link options for the arc, click
at the top of the Format Shape pane. For additional information, refer to Configure multi-
states for shapes and images and Add a navigation link to another display or website.
7. To close Design mode when you are finished editing the arc, click Modify Display
again.
Procedure
1. Click Modify Display to enter Design mode.
2. Click the Draw Shape tool and then click the polygon.
3. Click the background of the display, drag the cursor until the polygon reaches the desired
size, and then release the mouse button.
Note:
If you hold down the Shift key while dragging any of the polygon's handles, it will scale
proportionally.
4. Move the polygon on the display or resize it by using the sizing handles. Combine multiple
shapes to create diagrams and drawings.
Note:
To select multiple shapes, use the Ctrl key in combination with the left mouse button.
5. To format the polygon, right-click it and click Format Shape to open the Format Shape pane.
You can update the following settings for a polygon:
◦ Sides: Use this option to select the number of sides for the polygon. Options range from 3
to 12.
◦ Fill: Use this option to update the background color for the polygon with a built-in color, a
custom color with hex code or the color picker, or a transparent background.
◦ Border: Use this option to update the border color for the polygon with a built-in color, a
custom color with hex code or the color picker, or a transparent background.
◦ Weight: Use this option to increase or decrease the thickness of the polygon's Border.
◦ Style: Use this option to change the border style for the polygon from a solid line to one
of the dotted or dashed lines.
◦ Rotation: Drag the slider to the right to rotate the polygon clockwise. Drag the slider to
the left to rotate the polygon counterclockwise.
◦ Angle: To manually adjust the angle of rotation for the polygon, enter a number between
0 and 360.
Note:
This setting overrides any changes that you may have made to the Rotation setting.
6. To configure the Configure Multi-state and Add Navigation Link options for the polygon,
click at the top of the Format Shape pane. For additional information, refer to Configure
multi-states for shapes and images and Add a navigation link to another display or website.
7. To close Design mode when you are finished editing the polygon, click Modify Display
again.
Add text
To add text to the display, enter Design mode.
Procedure
1. On the editing toolbar, click the Text icon and then click anywhere in the display.
Upload images
You can add images to the display, such as pictures of equipment, diagrams, or screenshots of
operational Human-Machine Interfaces (HMI). You can also create a display background by
enlarging your image to the size of the display.
AVEVA PI Vision supports most image file formats, including JPG, TIF, GIF (static and
animated), BMP, and SVG. The maximum image size is 2 MB.
To upload an image, enter Design mode.
Procedure
1. On the editing toolbar, click the Image icon and then click anywhere in the display.
◦ To create a background image, enlarge the image to the size of the display, click the
Arrange icon on the editing toolbar, and then click Send to Back.
◦ To rotate an image, right-click it and click Format Image to open the Format Image pane.
Use the Rotation slider or manually enter the rotation Angle into the field.
Assets in displays
AVEVA PI Vision lets you switch the assets in your display for other assets. For example, if your
display contains symbols that visualize data items for your Tank 1 asset, you can switch the
display to show Tank 2 instead. The title bar in the display shows an asset list. From the asset
list, you can select a different asset to show in the display. You can configure the assets shown
in the asset list and you can hide the asset list.
Procedure
1. Click the asset list in the title bar to open the Switch Asset menu.
If the asset list has a plus + sign next to the name of the asset, you can switch more than one
asset in the display.
2. If you can switch more than one asset, then from the From list, select the asset in the display
that you want to switch.
3. From the To list, select the asset that you want to switch with the asset on the display.
Tip:
If the asset list is long, use the Filter field to filter the list of assets. Type text found in
the asset name.
You can use the wildcard character * to match any number of characters; you can use
the wildcard character ? to match a single character. AVEVA PI Vision automatically
assumes a leading and trailing * in any text that you type.
Results
AVEVA PI Vision updates symbols in the display to show data for the selected asset. Depending
on the display and configuration, all assets might change, or only matching assets might
change. See Asset-list configuration.
If assets are not based on the same template and an attribute is not defined for a new asset,
then the display shows "No Data" for that attribute.
If assets are based on the same template and an attribute is excluded from the new asset, then
the display shows "N/A" or a blank for that attribute. To hide symbols with excluded attributes,
configure the multi-state to hide bad data. See Excluded attributes.
Asset-list configuration
Display viewers can switch the assets shown in a display by selecting a different asset in the
display's asset list. Display creators can configure the asset list and control how changed assets
affect the display. The asset list can show:
• Assets created from the same asset template
With this default configuration, the asset list shows all other assets created from the same
template as assets in the display. In displays with multiple assets, the asset list lets viewers
pick the asset they want to switch. When viewers switch one asset, others remain
unchanged. This can result in unexpected results if different assets in the display are
related.
• Assets that match specified criteria
With this configuration, the asset list shows only assets that match criteria that display
creators specify. Creators can also configure how the display treats the asset upon change.
The display can treat the asset either as a lone asset and apply the change to matching
assets in the display, that is, assets with the same template or all assets if the assets do not
have a template, or as a root asset and apply the change to the asset and any child or
descendant assets based on the hierarchy.
You can also configure the display to hide the asset list. Choose the option that makes most
sense for the assets in the display and the intended use of the display.
By default, the asset list shows assets created from the same asset template as assets in the
display.
Videos
For more on this topic, watch the following video:
https://youtube.com/watch?v=SIxUbTPZWtU
Procedure
1. Open the configuration pane. There are two methods:
◦ Right-click the display canvas, and then click Configure Context Switching.
◦ In the asset list, click Configure asset context switching.
2. Click Show search results to specify that a particular set of assets be listed.
The pane lists additional configuration options for applying the selected asset to the display
and for specifying the search criteria for the listed attributes. By default, the search criteria
matches the assets currently in the display.
3. Under Action, click Use current asset to apply asset switches only to matching assets (that
is, those with the same template or all assets if the assets do not have a template).
4. Specify the search criteria that lists the desired assets.
The fields under Search Criteria define the assets to list; initially, they match the assets in
the display. See Asset-list options.
For example, suppose your database contains multiple sites and each site contains a set of
tanks. To have the asset list show the tanks under a particular site, set the Search Root field
to list the site.
Procedure
1. Open the configuration pane. There are two methods:
◦ Right-click the display canvas, and then click Configure Context Switching.
◦ In the asset list, click Configure asset context switching.
2. Click Show search results to specify that a particular set of assets be listed.
The pane lists additional configuration options for applying the selected asset to the display
and for specifying the search criteria for the listed attributes. By default, the search criteria
matches the assets currently in the display.
3. Under Action, click Use current asset as root to apply asset switches to matching assets and
matching child assets in the display.
4. Specify the search criteria that lists the desired assets.
The fields under Search Criteria define the assets to list; initially, they match the assets in
the display. See Asset-list options.
Procedure
1. Open the configuration pane. There are two methods:
◦ Right-click the display canvas, and then click Configure Context Switching.
◦ In the asset list, click Configure asset context switching.
Asset-list options
Use the Configure asset context switching pane to configure the asset list:
• Do not show
Hide the asset list from a display. This option is useful for displays designed for specific
assets or for complex displays that depict multiple assets where switching assets might be
confusing.
Action
When you select Show search results, select the method the display uses to apply the selected
asset to the display:
Search Criteria
When you select Show search results, specify the search criteria that defines the listed assets:
• Database
A single PI AF database that contains the assets you want listed.
• Search Root
A node of the asset hierarchy used as the root of the asset search. AVEVA PI Vision searches
this asset and its child assets (but not any parent assets) to find matching assets to insert in
the asset list. Specify the asset hierarchy by separating nodes with backslashes; do not
include the PI AF server and database. For example: Parent Asset\Child Asset\Child
Asset 2.
Select the Return All Descendants check box to list all the descendants of the asset, such as
grandchild assets.
• Asset Name
A name of a specific asset. You can use wildcards, such as question marks (?) to stand for
single characters and asterisks (*) to stand for multiple characters.
• Asset Type
An asset template that all listed assets must be created from.
• Asset Category
The asset category of the listed assets.
Graphics library
A large selection of graphics is available in the Graphics Library pane that you can open by
clicking the Graphics Library tab . The graphics belong to a wide range of categories,
industries, and themes. You can customize their color, fill type, and orientation. You can also
configure a graphic's multi-state behavior and allow it to automatically change color depending
on the state of the associated asset. See Configure multi-states for shapes, images, and text.
Add a graphic
Procedure
1. To open the Graphics Library pane, click the Graphics Library tab to the left of the
Assets pane.
Graphics categories are listed alphabetically and contain images from a variety of industries.
2. In the Graphics Library pane, click the category for the graphic you want to view and choose
a graphic from that category.
3. To add the selected graphic to a display, perform one of the following:
◦ Click the graphic and drag it onto the display.
◦ Click the graphic and then click anywhere on the display to add the graphic.
◦ Click the graphic, then click on the display while holding the mouse button and drag the
mouse to place and size the graphic.
Once you add a graphic, you can move or resize it.
4. To configure a multi-state for the graphic, right-click it and click Configure Multi-State. The
color of the graphic's fill changes depending on the state. See Configure multi-states for
shapes, images and text.
Format a graphic
Use the Format Graphic pane to customize the graphic's fill, flip orientation, or angle.
Procedure
1. Right-click the graphic and click Format Graphic to open the Format Graphic pane.
2. On the Format Graphic pane, you can configure the following options:
a. Fill Mode
The fill mode controls the way the image is drawn.
Monitor displays
Outside of Design mode, you can monitor a display.
Tip:
You can use the timebar at the bottom of the display to pan across the display's time
range, regardless of whether you are in Design mode or not.
to exit Design mode. AVEVA PI Vision locks the display, preventing you from accidentally
making changes to any symbols.
Procedure
• View trend cursors by clicking on any trend. (See Monitor trends with trend cursors.)
• Pan across the display's time range by dragging the lower section of the trend left or right.
(See Pan across a trend's time range.)
• Use trend zoom to zoom in on a particular range of time and value in a trend. (See Trend
zoom.)
• Add data items to existing symbols on the display by dragging data items from the search
results inside existing symbols.
On a trend, a data item appears as a new trace. On a table, a data item appears as a new row.
For value and gauge symbols, adding a data item swaps the existing data item with a new
one.
• Search for data items and drag them to the display to create new symbols.
When you create a new symbol, AVEVA PI Vision automatically enters Design mode.
• View any data symbol (trend, table, value, or gauge) as a pop-up trend in a separate, new
display by double-clicking the symbol.
The pop-up trend shows data from the symbol on the original display. Click the pop-up
trend to view trend cursors. You can also use a trend zoom, and pan across the pop-up
trend's time range by dragging the lower section of the trend left or right.
1. Start time
2. Revert display (and any trends) to original time configuration
3. Arrows shift the time range backwards or forwards
4. Duration button
5. Now button to return to current time
6. End time
The time bar control accepts valid PI System and Windows times, and launches an error
message in the event you enter an unsupported time format. See PI Time for more information
on acceptable inputs.
Procedure
• In the time bar control, click the duration button to view the duration menu
. This action resets the start time to accommodate the
duration you select. The durations available are set by the site administrator.
Note:
Keep in mind that some time durations are variable. For example, if the duration is 1
month(s), the number of days shown on the display will vary depending on the
current month. If it is April, the 1 month(s) duration converts to 30 days; however, if
it is May, the 1 month(s) duration converts to 31 days.
• Click the arrows to shift the display range forward or backward in time in increments of the
display range.
• In the time bar control, click the start or end time . An editable
field appears that allows you to enter a new start time or end time to edit the time value. If
the end time is set to an absolute time, or any time other than current time, the display will
not update. For more information, see PI Time.
• In the time bar control, click the Now button . Once set, the Now button and
display range remain highlighted and your symbols dynamically update.
PI time
You can use a special syntax, called PI time, to specify inputs for time stamps and time
intervals. PI time uses specific abbreviations, which you combine to create time expressions.
PI time abbreviations
When specifying PI time, you can use specific abbreviations that represent time units and
reference times.
Time-unit abbreviations
Abbreviation Full version Plural version Corresponding time unit
s second seconds Second
m minute minutes Minute
h hour hours Hour
d day days Day
mo month months Month
y year years Year
w week weeks Week
To specify time units, you can specify the abbreviation, the full version, or the plural version of
the time unit, such as s, second, or seconds. You must include a valid value with any time unit.
If specifying seconds, minutes, or hours, you can specify a fractional value, such as 1.25h. You
cannot specify fractional values for other time units.
Reference-time abbreviations
Abbreviation Full version Corresponding reference time
* Current time
t today 00:00:00 (midnight) of the current day
1: Use the first three letters as an abbreviation for any day of the week: sun, mon, tue, wed, thu, fri,
or sat.
2: Use the first three letters as an abbreviation for any month of the year: jan, feb, mar, apr, may, jun,
jun2 june 00:00:00 (midnight) on the current day in June of the current
year
dec DD december DD 00:00:00 (midnight) on the DDth day of December in the
current year
YYYY 00:00:00 (midnight) on the current day and month in year
YYYY
M-D or M/D 00:00:00 (midnight) on the Dth day of month M in the
current year
DD 00:00:00 (midnight) on the DDth day of the current month
1: Use the first three letters as an abbreviation for any day of the week: sun, mon, tue, wed, thu, fri,
or sat.
2: Use the first three letters as an abbreviation for any month of the year: jan, feb, mar, apr, may, jun,
PI time expressions
PI time expressions can include fixed times, reference-time abbreviations, and time offsets. A
time offset indicates the offset direction (either + or -) and the offset amount (a time-unit
abbreviation with a value).
For example, PI time expressions can have the following structure:
Structure Example
Fixed time only 24-aug-2012 09:50:00
Reference-time abbreviation only t
Time offset only +3h
Reference-time abbreviation with a time offset t+3h
Include at most one time offset in an expression; including multiple time offsets can lead to
unpredictable results.
Time-stamp specification
To specify inputs for time stamps, you can enter time expressions that contain:
• Fixed times
A fixed time always represents the same time, regardless of the current time.
Input Meaning
23-aug-12 15:00:00 3:00 p.m. on August 23, 2012
25-sep-12 00:00:00 (midnight) on September 25, 2012
• Reference-time abbreviations
A reference-time abbreviation represents a time relative to the current time.
Input Meaning
* Current time (now)
3-1 or 3/1 00:00:00 (midnight) on March 1 of the current year
2011 00:00:00 (midnight) on the current month and day in the year 2011
25 00:00:00 (midnight) on the 25th of the current month
t 00:00:00 (midnight) on the current date (today)
y 00:00:00 (midnight) on the previous date (yesterday)
tue 00:00:00 (midnight) on the most recent Tuesday
• Time offsets
Entered alone, time offsets specify a time relative to an implied reference time. The implied
reference time might be the current clock time or another time, depending on where you
enter the expression.
Input Meaning
-1d One day before the current time
+6h Six hours after the current time
Note:
Exporting is not supported for Event Comparison displays.
Procedure
• Click the Save As arrow to open the export options:
◦ Click Export as .xml to create an XML file with source data from the display.
◦ Click Export as .csv to create a CSV file with source data from the display.
AVEVA PI Vision retrieves up to 3600 values per data item and writes them to the exported
file.
Procedure
1. Right-click inside an empty area of the display and click Format Display.
2. Under Background, choose a color from the color panel.
Click the color wheel to choose a custom color by using a color slider, a color field, or by
entering a hexadecimal color value (#RRGGBB) in the top field.
3. To save the current setting as the default for all new displays, under Save Default
Configuration click Save Defaults.
Note:
You must have administrator privileges to save defaults.
• Level 5: Critical
• Level 4: Major
• Level 3: Minor
• Level 2: Warning
• Level 1: Information
• Level 0: None (no color)
Site administrators can set the colors for each event level, so the colors in your AVEVA PI Vision
site may differ from those shown here. For information on setting defaults, see the PI Vision
Installation and Administration Guide.
Training video
For more on this topic, watch the following video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I2W5vA43944
Discover events
Use the Events pane to view events related to assets in the display.
Procedure
1. Click the Events tab, located below the Assets tab, to open the Events pane.
The Events pane lists the events that match the criteria saved with the display. The default
criteria finds events that are related to assets in the display and active during the time range
in the display.
Note:
Listed events have the following conventions:
◦ Events in progress are marked with an asterisk (*).
◦ Events with default attributes show the event name followed by the default
attribute in parenthesis.
2. Configure the Events pane to update the events listed:
◦ Select the Automatically refresh the list check box to have AVEVA PI Vision automatically
update the list periodically (every 5 seconds by default) and whenever you change the
time range of the display.
◦ Click Edit Search Criteria to change the criteria that determines the listed events. For
more information, see Search for events.
Any changes are saved with the display.
3. Learn more about the listed events:
◦ Click an event to view its start time and end time.
The Attributes pane below the Events pane shows the attributes of the selected event.
Administrators define event attributes (the key parameters of the event) in PI System
Explorer.
◦ For events with child events, such as a root cause, click the arrow next to the event to
drill down to the child event.
◦ To apply the time range of an event to all symbols on the display, right-click the event and
then click Apply Time Range.
AVEVA PI Vision updates the time range of the display to match the time range of the
selected event.
Procedure
1. In the Events pane, click Edit Search Criteria to open the Edit Search Criteria pane.
2. Click the arrows to expand each search criteria and set appropriate values.
◦ Database
Select a single PI AF database that contains the events you want to retrieve.
Note:
The search will not work unless a database is selected.
◦ Time Range
Select the time range of the retrieved events:
▪ Timebar Duration: Find events that occurred between the start and end time of your
display.
▪ Any Time: Find events that occurred at any time.
▪ Today: Find events that occurred today.
▪ Last 7 Days: Find events that occurred in the last 7 days.
▪ Last 30 Days: Find events that occurred in the last 30 days.
▪ Custom Time Range: Use the time picker to select the start and end time for your
events or enter PI time.
◦ Event Name
Enter the name of the event you want to retrieve. You can use wildcards such as asterisks
(*). For example, enter *downtime* to find Reactor 3 Downtime. Do not use quotation
marks.
◦ Asset Name
Specify the asset associated with retrieved events:
▪ Any: Search all assets in the database for associated events.
▪ Assets on Display: Search assets on the current display for associated events. You must
be connected to PI AF version 2017 R2 or later to use this option.
▪ Specify Name: Enter the name of a specific asset that you want to search for
associated events. Use wildcards such as question marks (?) and asterisks (*) to stand
for single or multiple characters, respectively. Multiple assets are delimited by
semicolons.
◦ Asset Type
Select the asset template of assets referenced by retrieved events.
◦ Event Category
Select the category of retrieved events. For more information, see the PI Server topic
Categorization of objects (https://docs.osisoft.com/bundle/pi-server/page/
categorization-of-objects.html).
◦ Event Acknowledgment
Select the acknowledgement status of retrieved events:
▪ Any: Find events with any acknowledgment status.
▪ Acknowledged: Find events that users have acknowledged.
▪ Unacknowledged: Find events that no user has acknowledged.
You can acknowledge events on the event details page.
◦ Event Comments
Select the comment status of retrieved events:
▪ Any: Find events with and without comments.
▪ Has Comments: Find events that have comments.
▪ No Comments: Find events that do not have comments.
You can insert comments to annotate events on the event detail page.
◦ Event Duration
To retrieve events with a specific duration, select Specify Duration and enter the
maximum and minimum duration of the desired event. Duration can be expressed in
seconds, minutes, hours, or days.
◦ Number of Results
Specify the number of events to retrieve:
▪ All Events: Retrieve any number of matching events.
▪ Number of Most Recent Events: Retrieve the specified number of events, starting with
the most recent.
▪ Number of Earliest Events: Retrieve the specified number of events, starting with the
earliest event.
◦ Search Mode
Select when the retrieved events occurred relative to the time range set in the Time
Range criteria:
▪ Events Active in Range: Find events that were active at any time within the specified
time range. These events might have begun before the start of the specified time range
and ended after the end of the specified time range.
▪ Events Entirely in Range: Find events that began and ended within the specified time
range.
▪ Events Starting in Range: Find events that began within the specified time range.
▪ Events Ending in Range: Find events that ended within the specified time range.
3. Select the Return All Descendants check box to also return all the descendants of the
retrieved events, such as child events or grandchild events.
4. Click Apply to search for matching events and close the Edit Search Criteria pane.
The search results appear inside the Events pane.
Procedure
1. In the Events pane, click Create Events Table to create an events table
on the display.
The table shows all the events listed in the Events pane. If the pane does not contain events,
the events table will be blank.
Note:
To automatically fit the contents of a column, double-click the border to the right of
the column heading.
2. To sort the data in the table, click a column header.
The sort order is indicated by an arrow. To reverse the sort order, click the header again. To
remove the sort, click the header a third time.
3. To change the order of columns, select a column header and drag it to another column
inside the table.
4. To view the events of another related asset, use the asset list to switch assets (see Switch
assets shown in symbols) or change the events search criteria in the Search Criteria pane
(see Configure an events table).
Note:
To use the asset list to switch related assets in the events table, the Asset Name
criteria on the Search Criteria pane must be set to Selected Asset on Display.
5. To add and remove columns, or to change the events search criteria, right-click the table and
then select Configure Table. See Configure an events table.
6. To add an event frame attribute to the table, select an event frame in the Events pane, and
then drag and drop the attribute from the Attributes pane on to the table.
Note:
The table shows a value for the event frame attribute for each event in the table that
has an attribute with the same name. The values shown are at the time of the event,
not the display time range.
7. To add an attribute from a reference element to the table, in the Events pane, select an event
frame, click the arrow for the reference element in the Attributes pane, and then drag and
drop the attribute on to the table.
Note:
The table shows a value for the reference element attribute for each event in the table
that has an element attribute with the same name. The values shown are at the time of
the event, not the display time range.
8. To add multi-state behavior to the table, right-click the table and select Add Multi-State.
See Multi-state behaviors.
9. To set the display time bar to the duration of an event, right-click the event row in the table
and select Apply Time Range. If the event is still In Progress, the end time is set to Now.
See Time bar control.
10. To open the Event Details page that contains more information about a particular event,
right-click the event row in the table and select Event Details or click on the Event Name.
See View event details and annotate events.
11. To compare multiple related events, right-click the event row in the table and select either
Compare Similar Events By Name or Compare Similar Events By Type. See Compare
multiple events.
Procedure
1. To open the Configure Table pane, right-click the events table, and then click Configure
Table.
2. Under Columns, the columns that appear in the table are shown in the Current Columns list.
Available columns not included in the table are shown in the Additional Attributes list. To
move a column from one list to the other, select the column, and then click the arrow that
points to the other list.
◦ Asset: View the name of the asset associated with each event.
◦ Asset Path: View the path in PI AF to the asset associated with each event.
◦ Event Type: View the event type of each event.
◦ Start Time: View the start time of each event, including the date.
◦ End Time: View the end time of each event, including the date.
◦ Severity: View the severity level of each event.
Format Description
Scientific Show numbers in the format 0.00E+00.
7. To add multi-state behavior to event frame attribute columns, click the down arrow at
the top of the pane and then click Add Multi-State. For details, see Multi-state behaviors.
Procedure
1. Double-click on a row or right-click and select Open Popup Trend From Row to open a
popup trend for that event.
Note:
If you click on an Event Name, an Event Details page for the event opens.
2. Click inside an opened popup trend to view trend cursors. You can also use a trend zoom
and pan across the popup trend's time range by dragging the lower section of the trend left
or right.
3. You can set the scale and traces for the popup trend. See Configure trend and its style.
4. Click to return to the original display.
Event details
The event details page shows the process behavior of an event's attributes inside a trend and
tables. From the event details page, you can analyze, acknowledge, and annotate critical events.
Note:
From PI System Explorer, PI administrators grant permissions to acknowledge and
annotate events (PI AF version 2016 or later is required). For more information, see the
AVEVA PI Vision administration topic Set permissions to allow users to acknowledge and
annotate events (https://docs.osisoft.com/bundle/pi-vision/page/set-permissions-to-
allow-users-to-annotate-and-acknowledge-events.html).
Note:
To acknowledge and annotate events (to share comments and attachments related to the
event with your colleagues), you require permission, granted by the PI administrator in
PI System Explorer. Without proper permission, you can only view comments.
Procedure
1. In the Events pane, right-click any event in the list and then click Event Details to open the
event details page.
You can also open the event details page from the event-comparison page.
2. To view event details for another event, click a different event on the list.
3. Use the collapsible tables to add or remove attributes to and from the trend.
a. To add an attribute to the trend, click the row containing that attribute.
The row will be highlighted, and the attribute will appear on the trend.
Note:
Only attributes containing numerical data, with rows marked with a trend icon
, can be plotted. If the event attribute is a summary operation (Average, Min,
Max, and so on), then the source attribute will be plotted, not the summary value.
b. To remove an attribute from the trend, click the highlighted row containing that
attribute.
c. To highlight the trace of an attribute on the trend, hover your mouse over the attribute in
the table.
4. To filter the table items and see only the items you want, click the filter icon to the right of a
column heading and set your filtering parameters on the filter menu.
You can enter a value or string and choose from the following operators:
After you click Filter, the table shows only the items that have not been filtered out. The
filter icon on the column header changes from white to blue, indicating that a filter is in
effect for that column. To clear the filter, open the filter menu again and click Clear.
Note:
Filtering is only available for events that have been completed. In-progress events
cannot be included in the filter.
5. To acknowledge the event, click Acknowledge.
An acknowledgement is posted under Actions and Comments with your name and the time
of acknowledgement.
Acknowledgements cannot be deleted or reassigned and are stored on the PI AF server.
6. To add a comment, enter the comment in the Add Comment field and click Add.
The comment is posted under Actions and Comments with your name and the time of the
comment.
Note:
The text limit is 2500 characters.
7. To attach a file, click the Attach button under the Add Comment field, browse to your
file, click Open, and then click Add.
The attachment is posted under Actions and Comments with your name and the time of
attachment.
Note:
By default, the maximum file size for an attachment is 7 MB. Allowed file types include
DOCX, PDF, TXT, XLSX, CVS, JPG, JPEG, SVG, TIFF, GIF, and PDI. Maximum file size and
allowed file types can be configured by the PI administrator in PI AF version 2016 and
later. For more information, see the AVEVA PI Vision administration topic Change
event annotation file types and size limits (https://docs.osisoft.com/bundle/pi-
vision/page/change-annotation-file-type-and-size-limits.html).
8. If desired, set or change the reason for the event:
◦ To clear the current reason, click Clear and then click Apply.
◦ To set a new reason, select the reason from the list and then click Apply.
9. To return to your display and exit the event details page, click the Back button.
Procedure
1. After you open an event details page, move the cursor to the bottom of the trend until the
cursor changes to a drag cursor.
2. Click the highlighted lower section of the trend and drag the trend left or right to pan across
the time range backwards or forwards. If you are using a touch-sensitive device, tap and
hold the plot area of a trend and slide right or left to move backwards or forwards in time.
The duration of time shown is not affected.
3. To return to the default time range and show the updating trend for the event, click Revert
.
Procedure
1. After you open an event details page, drag your pointer over any area of an event. The area
you drag over remains illuminated, while the remaining portions of the trend are grayed
out. If you are using a touch-sensitive device, stretch two fingers apart to zoom in. Pinch two
fingers together to zoom out.
2. Release the pointer.
The trend redraws, zooming in on the area you selected. The y-axis and start and end times
are adjusted accordingly.
3. To remove the zoom, click Revert .
Procedure
1. Open an event details page.
2. Select how scales are displayed for the y-axis by clicking one of the following:
◦ Multiple scales
A single scale spans the highest top and lowest bottom values.
3. Select the range of values on the axis by clicking one of the following:
◦ Autorange of dynamic values
Set the scale to the minimum and maximum plotted values of the trend's time range.
◦ Database limits
Set the scale to the data item's configured minimum and maximum values.
◦ Custom limits
Set the maximum and minimum values manually by entering the Top and Bottom values,
and then click Apply. This option is only available when the Single scale option is
selected.
4. To configure the presentation style for the traces for the selected attribute, click one of the
following:
◦ Line
Default setting. Displays a trace line with no individual recorded data points.
◦ Data Markers
Displays individual recorded data points with connecting lines between them.
◦ Scatter Plot
Event comparisons
AVEVA PI Vision lets you compare events such as process downtime, process excursions,
operator shifts, or batches. With the event comparison feature, you can analyze process data
across multiple events on a single overlay trend. The feature is designed to help you identify
similarities and differences between events, assess sub-events, and determine root causes.
By default, the event-comparison page displays up to 11 events, including the event you
selected in the Events pane as well as ten earlier events of the same type. Each event is color-
coded and has a legend marker next to its name to help you locate the event on the overlay
trend and the Gantt chart. Drag and drop additional attributes. Select whether to display each
attribute on a separate trend or all attributes on a combined trend.
The following figure shows the event-comparison page.
Callout Description
1 Events pane listing all the events you are comparing.
2 Overlay Trend display showing overlay trends for each attribute of the event and the asset
you want to analyze. Each overlay trend shows multiple events for a single event attribute.
For example, an overlay trend for an attribute called "Downtime" will show a graph with 11
traces with each trace representing a different downtime event.
3 Zero Line marking the start time of the event.
4 Attributes pane listing all the attributes associated with the event you want to analyze.
5 Root Cause showing the time period leading up to the event that is considered a "child"
event.
6 Gantt Chart pane representing each event in the Events pane with a color-coded Gantt bar.
The position and length of the Gantt bar reflects the start time, duration, and end time of the
event. The Gantt bar shows if there are "child" or other descendant events associated with
the event, such as root causes.
Videos
For more on this topic, watch the following video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I2W5vA43944
Procedure
1. In the Events pane, right-click the event you want to compare and click either Compare
Similar Events By Name or Compare Similar Events By Type.
When comparing events by name, the event-comparison page displays up to 11 events with
the same name, event type, and referenced asset. When comparing events by type, the
event-comparison page displays up to 11 events based on the same type and same
referenced asset.
If an event is currently "in-progress", it will have a legend marker symbol at the end of its
trace, and the overlay trend will show a green circle next to its title.
2. Select an event from the list to highlight its trace on the overlay trend and view its start and
end time.
Each event is color-coded and has a legend marker next to its name to help you locate the
event on the overlay trend and the Gantt chart.
3. Click anywhere on the overlay trend to view a trend cursor. You can add multiple cursors.
When an attribute is selected, the cursors show that attribute value for every event on the
trend. If no attribute is selected when the cursor is added, the first attribute is selected
automatically. Each value is shown in the same color as its corresponding trace, and values
are listed in the order they appear in the Events pane. When an event is selected, the cursors
show all attribute values for that one event in the order they appear in the toolbar. When
you select a different event or attribute, the cursor is updated to reflect that selection.
4. To hide an event, right-click the event in the Events pane and click Hide Event. You can also
right-click the event's color-coded bar in the Gantt chart and click Hide Event.
The event will be hidden on each overlay trend and the Gantt chart, and will be grayed out
in the Events pane.
5. To show a hidden event, right-click the grayed-out event in the Events pane and click Show
Event.
6. To delete an overlay trend, click the X icon next to the trend's title.
Procedure
1. After you create an event-comparison page, right-click the event you want to pin in the
Events pane and click Pin Event.
The pinned events appear at the top of the pane in the Pinned section and have yellow
legend marker next to them.
2. After you pin an event, you can perform the following operations:
◦ To highlight the pinned event on the overlay trend, select the event in the Events pane.
◦ To add another pinned event, right-click that event and click Pin Event.
◦ To save the pinned event, save the event-comparison display by clicking Save and
entering a display name.
◦ To perform another event search while keeping your pinned events at the top of the
Events pane, click Edit Search Criteria.
3. To unpin your pinned event, right-click it and click Unpin Event.
Procedure
1. After you create an event-comparison page, move the cursor to the bottom of the trend until
the cursor changes to a drag cursor.
2. Click the highlighted lower section of the trend and drag the trend left or right to pan across
the time range backwards or forwards. If you are using a touch-sensitive device, click
to activate touch mode and then tap and hold the plot area of a trend and slide right or left
to move backwards or forwards in time.
Panning across an individual trend will change the time range of all displayed event
comparisons. The duration of time shown is not affected.
3. To return to the default time range and show updating trends for open event frames, click
Revert .
Procedure
1. After you create an event-comparison page, drag your pointer over any area of an event
comparison. The area you drag over remains illuminated, while the remaining portions of
the trend are grayed out. If you are using a touch-sensitive device, click Touch Mode
to activate touch mode and then stretch two fingers apart to zoom in. Pinch two fingers
together to zoom out.
2. Release the pointer.
The trend redraws, zooming in on the area you selected. The start time and end time of all
displayed events are adjusted accordingly. The corresponding area of the Gantt chart is
highlighted.
3. To remove the zoom, click Revert .
Procedure
1. To maximize a trend, click in the upper right corner of the trend.
Procedure
1. Select an attribute that you want to trend from the Attributes pane and drag it onto an
Overlay Trend. Drop the attribute on an existing trend to see a combined trend or drop it
above or below existing trends to see it on a separate trend. A green line around the
attribute indicates a valid location to drop it.
The Attributes pane shows each attribute's value at the start time of the event.
Note:
If you do not see the attribute you are looking for, click the triangle next to the asset
at the bottom of the Attributes pane to view a full list of attributes.
2. The trend for the dragged attribute appears on the overlay trend with multiple color-coded
traces. Each trace represents the same attribute’s process behavior during multiple related
events.
If the trend shows multiple attributes, the axis shows values for the first attribute, then the
minimum and maximum value for each additional attribute in the order shown at the top of
the trend. Click on attribute to highlight its scale.
3. Select an event in the Events pane to highlight its trace on the overlay trend.
Procedure
• To view child events on the Gantt chart, click the plus icon on the Gantt bar of the event
you wish to analyze. Child events are shown as segments beneath the Gantt bar of each
event.
• To hide child events, click the minus icon on the Gantt bar.
• To expand all events at a level, right-click on an event at the level to expand and select
Expand One Level.
• To collapse all events at a level, right-click on an event at the level to collapse and select
Collapse One Level.
Note:
To align child events, child events must be identical for each compared event.
Procedure
1. To view child events on the Gantt chart, click the plus icon on the Gantt bar of the event
you want to analyze.
2. To align the Overlay Trends to the start time of the selected child event, right-click the child
event and click Align.
3. To zoom the Overlay Trends to the start and end time of the selected child event and
examine this time segment in more detail, right-click the child event and click Align and
Zoom.
4. To undo the aligning of child events, right-click the child event and click Revert.
Procedure
1. Open an event-comparison page.
2. Click to open the Configure Trend toolbar.
Set the scale to the minimum and maximum plotted values of the trend's time range.
◦ Database limits
Set the scale to the data item's configured minimum and maximum values.
◦ Custom limits
Set the maximum and minimum values manually by entering the Top and Bottom values,
and then click Apply.
If the trend shows multiple attributes, the axis shows values for the first attribute, then the
minimum and maximum value for each additional attribute in the order shown at the top of
the trend. Click on attribute to highlight its scale.
5. To configure the presentation style for the traces for the selected attribute, click one of the
following:
◦ Line
Default setting. Displays a trace line with no individual recorded data points.
◦ Data Markers
Displays individual recorded data points with connecting lines between them.
◦ Scatter Plot
6. To select the line style for the selected attribute, click the down arrow and select the line
style from the drop-down.
Line styles are applied if either the Line or Data Markers style is selected.
7. To configure the trend for another attribute, select the attribute and then select the scale
and trace settings for that attribute.
8. When you have finished configuring the trend, click to close the Configure Trend
toolbar.
Procedure
1. To save a new event comparison display, click Save or press Ctrl+S and enter a
display name.
2. To save the display with a new name, click the down arrow next to Save and then click Save
As.
Next time you are on the home page, you will see your event comparison display's name and
thumbnail. You can open the display from the home page with the same overlay trends,
asset context, and events context.
4. To rename a saved display, open it, click the display's name in the Display field of the header,
enter a new name, and save the display.