setCellProperties
ElementsetCellProperties :applyToConverse=bool? => (setStyle | setFrameStyle | setFormat | setMetaData)* union[union_]?
The setCellProperties
element sets style properties of cells or
row or column labels.
Interpreting setCellProperties
requires answering two
questions: which cells or labels to style, and what styles to use.
union => intersect+ intersect => where+ | intersectWhere | alternating | EMPTY where :variable=ref (sourceVariable | derivedVariable) :include => EMPTY intersectWhere :variable=ref (sourceVariable | derivedVariable) :variable2=ref (sourceVariable | derivedVariable) => EMPTY alternating => EMPTY
When union
is present with intersect
children, each of
those children specifies a group of cells that should be styled, and
the total group is all those cells taken together. When union
is absent, every cell is styled. One attribute on
setCellProperties
affects the choice of cells:
If true, this inverts the meaning of the cell selection: the selected
cells are the ones not designated. This is confusing, given
the additional restrictions of union
, but in the corpus
applyToConverse
is never present along with union
.
An intersect
specifies restrictions on the cells to be matched.
Each where
child specifies which values of a given variable to
include. The attributes of intersect
are:
Refers to a variable, e.g. dimension0categories
. Only
“categories” variables make sense here, but other variables, e.g.
dimension0group0map
, are sometimes seen. The reader may ignore
these.
A value, or multiple values separated by semicolons,
e.g. 0
or 13;14;15;16
.
PSPP ignores setCellProperties
when intersectWhere
is
present.
setStyle :target=ref (labeling | graph | interval | majorTicks) :style=ref style => EMPTY setMetaData :target=ref graph :key :value => EMPTY setFormat :target=ref (majorTicks | labeling) :reset=bool? => format | numberFormat | stringFormat+ | dateTimeFormat | elapsedTimeFormat setFrameStyle :style=ref style :target=ref majorTicks => EMPTY
The set*
children of setCellProperties
determine the
styles to set.
When setCellProperties
contains a setFormat
whose
target
references a labeling
element, or if it contains
a setStyle
that references a labeling
or interval
element, the setCellProperties
sets the style for table cells.
The format from the setFormat
, if present, replaces the cells’
format. The style from the setStyle
that references
labeling
, if present, replaces the label’s font and cell
styles, except that the background color is taken instead from the
interval
’s style, if present.
When setCellProperties
contains a setFormat
whose
target
references a majorTicks
element, or if it
contains a setStyle
whose target
references a
majorTicks
, or if it contains a setFrameStyle
element,
the setCellProperties
sets the style for row or column labels.
In this case, the setCellProperties
always contains a single
where
element whose variable
designates the variable
whose labels are to be styled. The format from the setFormat
,
if present, replaces the labels’ format. The style from the
setStyle
that references majorTicks
, if present,
replaces the labels’ font and cell styles, except that the background
color is taken instead from the setFrameStyle
’s style, if
present.
When setCellProperties
contains a setStyle
whose
target
references a graph
element, and one that
references a labeling
element, and the union
element
contains alternating
, the setCellProperties
sets the
alternate foreground and background colors for the data area. The
foreground color is taken from the style referenced by the
setStyle
that targets the graph
, the background color
from the setStyle
for labeling
.
A reader may ignore a setCellProperties
that only contains
setMetaData
, as well as setMetaData
within other
setCellProperties
.
A reader may ignore a setCellProperties
whose only set*
child is a setStyle
that targets the graph
element.
setStyle
ElementsetStyle :target=ref (labeling | graph | interval | majorTicks) :style=ref style => EMPTY
This element associates a style with the target.
The id
of an element whose style is to be set.
The id
of a style
element that identifies the style to
set on the target.