The Interpolate Property workflow
The Interpolate Property workflow (prepare > Surfaces > Interpolate Property) provides a flexible way to interpolate properties with the possibility to update them later.
The workflow leads you through various steps where you select the event (and surface representation) for which you want to generate the new property, the input data to use, the interpolation technique and optionally a clipping boundary and trend. The workflow also provides a data clean-up step, with which you can (temporarily) set input data points as 'inactive' so that this data is ignored during the property interpolation process. The output consists of an interpolated property, carrying the name of the property definition and stored under the surface representation of your choice.
Advantages of working with this workflow are:
- Input can exist of multiple properties from different surface representations. These surface representations can be of the same or different events. When combining multiple properties as input, their 'property type' must be the same.
- Workflow settings are stored in a Property Definition. This facilitates easy recreation of a property after you made changes to any of the settings in the workflow steps. After you made a change you can directly proceed to the last step to recreate the property.
- You can exclude parts of the input data from being used as input by making the nodes of the representation 'inactive'. This is called 'data clean-up' in the workflow. This data will not be deleted but set to 'inactive' while the original input data is preserved. This way you can easily make variations to your input.
- You can choose from more interpolation techniques.
- You can add a trend to 'steer' the output property beyond the input data.
- The Interpolate Property workflow can be automated via the JewelScript Editor.
For more information about each of the workflow steps, see
Creating the property definition
Assigning data to a property definition