![]() ![]() So, use absolute specification if you need to move the boolean gates and they refer to gates that are at different levels. Want to do is to specify SubsetX AND SubsetY as relative, and Monos as absolute path-so that the Monos references would be correct no matter where in the heirarchy the Boolean gate is dragged. If you now dragged this gate to the LiveGate under SubsetĬ, then the references to Subset X AND Subset Y work just fine (because those exist at the relative level under Subset C-but it won't find the Monos gate because that one is now one more level up the hierarchy. In relative terms, this is specified as /Subset X AND /Subset Y AND NOT ///Monos - i.e., have to go up three levels to get to Monos. Consider a gate that you want to add to Subset A which is something like Subset X AND Subset Y AND NOT Monos (i.e., you want events that are both in Subset X and Subset Y but With absolute reference, they would still refer to the ones under the Subset A gate-which is probably not what you wanted.īut there are times when you want absolute references. If you add a boolean gate to Subset A which is Subset X OR Subset Y with relative paths, and then drag that boolean gate to Subset B, the boolean gate will now change to refer to the gates Subset X and Subset Y that are under the ![]()
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