Property reference

glide.ngbsm.filters_fit_to_screen_automatically

The glide.ngbsm.filters_fit_to_screen_automatically property determines whether graphs automatically adjust to fit the screen when filters are modified. Admins should consider enabling this feature to enhance user experience by ensuring graphs are always displayed optimally.

Default: false Type: boolean Application: Global

Key questions about this property

The answers below summarize the purpose, scope, default effect, and review scenarios for this property.

What does it do? This property, when set to true, automatically resizes graphs to fit the screen after any filter changes, improving visibility and usability.
What area does it affect? Graph display settings
What does the default mean? The default value is "false", which means this behavior is disabled by default.
When should you review it? Review this property when optimizing user interface settings or addressing graph visibility issues.

Out of the box property record

Raw metadata from the property record.

Property name glide.ngbsm.filters_fit_to_screen_automatically
Sys ID 24771163d7132100976a69418e610348
Type boolean
Application Global
Default value false
Description <span style = 'font-family: Arial; font-size: 13px; color: #4a4a4a;'>A value of true indicates that when filters are changed the graph will be fit to the screen automatically.<ul style='margin: 0px; padding-left:15px;'><li>Type: Yes | No</li><li>Default: No</li></ul></span>
Updated 2024-05-25 04:39:35

Sources

Official references and nearby text excerpts where this property appears.

Documentation excerpt View supporting context
Context preview Snippet 1
... • Default value: Yes • Location: Dependency Views > Map Properties A value of true indicates that when filters are changed the graph will be fit to the screen automatically. glide.ngbsm.filters_fit_to_screen_automatically • Type: Yes | No • Default value: No • Location: Dependency Views > Map Properties A value of true allows relationship lines to be drawn using smooth curves instead ...