The pane at the top of the tab enables a particular Plant Model Management Class Description and its
Attribute Value to be selected. A
Popup Menu is available (mouse right-click) with options of
Edit,
Add, Delete and
Set Default. This is used to edit an existing class, add a new class, remove an existing class, or set an existing class as default. The description is user-defined, the attribute value must match the attribute value for the particular class.
The associated Up and
Down buttons are for rearranging the 'Order' of the classes, from top to bottom. The least important class is at the top; the most important at the bottom. From a pair of clashing elements, the auto-assignment process selects the discipline of the less important element to be the owner of the clash, that is, the element with the class that is nearer to the top of the list.
The Description field is for specifying the text to appear as the report column header for the attribute values.
The Attribute box enables the attribute associated with the selected class attribute value to be specified. Clash Manager will search for the attribute on the clashing item, and if not found there, will search the owning hierarchy for it. If
Not Used is selected, the CLASS attribute does not appear in the Clash Manager GUI. Note that CLASS is designed to produce a modest number of look-up records, when a value is used as a wildcard. An attribute, such as a NAME that would return a large number of values should not be used.
The Discover button automatically produces a list of class descriptions and attributes that are applicable to elements in clashes that have been discovered by Clash Manager. Each Description of the various classes is formed by a concatenation of the attribute name followed by the particular attribute value. For example, for an attribute 'type' and a value BEND, the description is 'type BEND'. Each listed attribute value is available as a Regular Expression wildcard (see
Notes on Wildcards) for use in assignment and acceptance rules. The values are preceded by ^ and followed by $ to make sure that only complete strings are matched, for example, ^BEND$.