 What I'm going to look at today is the drawing tools, which is the top tab on the left hand panel. I've got a map here on the right hand side, which is a primary school. I'm going to go through each of the drawing tools in turn. So we start by opening the drawing tools by clicking on the top tab. Let's start with looking at what we've got available. There are markers, there are shapes, lines, text. You can measure things. You can add a text box. You can add your own images. There's a buffer tool and a grid reference tool. There are also tools on the bottom line here, which are greyed out at the moment, but these will allow you to modify any of the shapes and lines that you add to the map later. I'm going to start with the markers and add a number of markers to the map. As you can see, when I click on the markers tab, you get a number of different markers that you can choose from. Some of these you can change the colour and size and jokers on and some of them are fixed. Let's start with the balloon one and I'm going to add a number of different markers to different houses here. Just by way of an example, all I'm doing is selecting the marker and then clicking on the map where I want the marker to appear. I can choose a different marker by selecting a different marker like this and just click on the map and just add them to the map that way. I'm going to use a different one again just for variety to show you what they look like. As you can see, when I put markers on the map, some of these line and fill settings appear at the bottom. I'm going to use the Select tool, which is a single arrow, and I'm going to select one of my markers here. It will go yellow when it's selected. Once it's selected yellow, I can then use the line settings here to change the colour around the edge of the marker and to change its middle colour. Let's do something that will make it stand out. As you can see, when I select anywhere off the marker, just click anywhere else on the map, you can see that the marker I selected previously has now got a red edge and a yellow centre rather than having a black edge and a blue centre. If I use the selection box here, I can in fact select all my markers just by clicking and dragging a box over all of them. As you can see, they're all highlighted in yellow and the marker settings are available again. So this way I can change all the marker settings to be the same. So I'm going to give them a green outline and a green fill setting. I can change the opacity of the green fill like this by using this slider here. And again, when I click anywhere else on the map to unselect everything, you'll see that all my markers now have the same fill and line settings. I can do the same with shapes. So I'm going to draw a shape here. As you can see, when I click the shape markers at the top row, I then get a number of different options for shapes. The polygon is the most commonly used one. This will give you an irregular polygon with straight sides. You can use a freehand drawing polygon too, which will give you a much more fluid shape. And there are preset shapes as well, which I'll show you. Let's start with the irregular polygon shape here. So I click on the map to start drawing. I'm just going to draw the edge of the field here. And I can just click to change direction every time I want to change direction. And I double click to stop drawing my shape and there is my shape complete. As you can see, the line and fill settings appear on the left-hand panel again. And again, I can choose the select button, selects my shape when it turns yellow with the yellow outline. And I can then change the fill settings this way. So I can choose to make it blue with blue edge and a pale blue fill like this. And then I click anywhere off the map to unselect the shape. And the settings I've just made will take effect. I can also draw some lines. So the lines here will draw from where I start to where I finish. I can make it a multiple angle line. So I could go from this house here, out here, and along to school this way. Click, click, click. And all I do is double click to finish the line. I can draw a straight line as well, one double click. And I can draw as many lines as I like straight like that. Double click to finish. Again, the line settings appear on the left-hand panel. And I can select each line individually like this. So it turns yellow. And then I can change the color of those lines accordingly. I could make them each a different color. I can make them all the same color. I can also change the, whether it's a dotted line or a solid line or a dashed line. And I can also change the weight of the line. So let's make this one a dotted green line seven point. Click anywhere off the map and you can see that the settings change. Let's do the last one here and make this one right pink. And we'll do a dashed line. So you can see what that, that's a long dash to what that looks like. There we can have different sorts of lines. If I want to add text to the map, I can click the text button here. What I need to do now is to put a marker on the map. So I click on the map to know where my place my text and it will produce a pop-up box like this. So I can say my house and click okay. And the marker that I, sorry, the anchor point that I put down will be in the bottom left-hand corner of the text. When I see that little grab hand, I can then pick this text up and move it around, put it wherever I like. Similarly, if I use the select button, I can click on it once and you'll see that there's a little pale yellow line around the anchor point. I can leave the text as it is by clicking okay. So that little pale yellow circle is still there, the text is still selected and I can change the text setting here in the left-hand panel. So I'm going to make this one red, I'm going to make it not bold, I'm going to make it smaller and I'm going to change the font. And again, when I click off the map, off the item itself, anywhere else on the map, it unselects and the text settings that I have made them take effect. When it comes to measurement tool, I can apply this to any of the shapes or lines that I've already drawn. This is the measure tool and then I simply select the shape that I want to measure. Shapes like this will give me an area measurement and the lines will give me a distance measurement. So I can measure each line in turn, I have to reselect the measure tool each time, but it will give me the distance that I've drawn each line like this. If I want to add a text box, I can click on the text box here. Again, we'll add an anchor point and then give me a little box to write some text in. So I'm going to draw an anchor point here and I'm going to type some text on how this is here. And I can click off the box in order to settle it there. I want to run my mouse over this, I can then pick it, pick up the box and move it around like oops, this is slightly tricky. I can pick the box up and move it around somehow. I can certainly move the anchor point if I want to and I can pick the box up and reposition that to where I want. I can also change the size and shape of it like this and I can move it again as a complete unit. If I wanted to add my own photograph to the map, I can do the exactly the same thing using the image button here. So I click on the map where I want the image anchor to be. I can then choose browse to upload the file that I've got ready made here. True Blue Peter style, click upload and the image is there. I can then move the image around to make sure it's in the right position from the map. And I can also move the anchor point as well. If I want to add a grid reference, I can choose the grid reference tool here. There is an automatic setting which means that it will give you a grid reference that is appropriate for the scale of the map that you're looking at. But in some cases you may want a very specific size of grid reference for the purpose that you would choose it for. So if you wanted a six digit grid reference, you could just click on the map and it will always give you a six digit grid reference. If you choose the automatic one, the grid reference will change according to the scale of the map. So this particular map is very detailed, so you will get a very detailed grid reference. If you were looking at a road Atlas map, you get a much less detailed grid. I would also like to show you the buffer tool buffer tool is fairly straightforward in that it will draw a distance away from the point of the line that you click. Let's start with the, the point tool and then enter a radius of 0.5 kilometers and I'm going to see how many of the shapes that I've drawn live for 0.5 kilometers from the school. So all I need to do is use the blue dot that's on my mouse cursor, click and it will automatically draw me a half a kilometer circle radius like this. Similarly, I can use the buffer tool to draw a line if I wanted to draw a buffer zone of, say, 100 meters, I can type any value I like into the radius. 100 meters from, from the school boundary here. I'm just going to go down two sides of it. I can double click to finish my line. That will give me a 100 meter buffer zone around the line that I've drawn. That's quite useful for looking at things like rivers and roads and distances from a particular linear feature. And then I can select the feature that I want. I'm going to select the circle one here and I'm going to change the line and fill settings on this one. Let's make it purple and that great and click off and you can see my shape has changed. This map is getting quite confusing now. So let's look at how we delete features. You can either delete individual features on the basis of a click. In the delete section here, choose the click button, and I can click on one feature, and it will just delete the one feature, delete my buffer zone again, and it leaves that if I want to delete my text box and just click. Alternatively, if I wanted to delete, delete many of them. I can use the select box here and draw a box over those features that I want to select. All those are highlighted in yellow. And then use the delete selected button in the middle here, and that will delete just those features. The other thing to show you with with the shapes, I'm going to go back to the shapes field and show you some of these. If I choose the freehand shape, I'm going to draw a rough shape like this. This is just for illustrative purposes. I'm just dragging my mouse and the moment I let go, my shape stops drawing. If I wanted to edit this feature, I can select it using the select tool here. So it goes yellow, and I then have the modify tools underneath that become available to me. So let's take these in turn. I can either label my feature, call it my shape, click OK, and it will label my feature that way. I can change the points on it. So clicking the points tool here, which case I'll be able to just move individual points around. This doesn't show up very well with an irregular polygon like this, but it's easier to show you the regular ones. I can rotate my shape by clicking the rotate button and you'll see the blue arrow appears in the middle and then I can simply rotate my shape around just by clicking and dragging it to where I want it. I can scale my shape using the next button, which draws an invisible box around it and I can then use this little blue dot in the corner to make the shape bigger or smaller. I can also transform the shape, which will change that size in both directions like this or swap it over completely to do a mirror image. If I was looking at an image, I could use the view button too. Let me show you that again with the more regular shape. I'm going to click the Select button and I'm going to delete that shape there by clicking the Delete on Click button. If I was to choose a different shape, such as a triangle, I can draw a triangle like this. I can spin this around before I click. So when I click, the shape is fixed there, but if I choose the Select tool now, select my triangle, I can then change the points on it to make it whatever shape I want like this. But I can also choose the rotate button and then spin my shape around the central point again. If I want to delete everything, there's this handy button here which says Delete All. Fortunately, it gives you a chance to check. If you hit the Delete All drawings button, it's gone. There's no undo, you can't get it back. So do you think twice? Delete all drawings and I'm back to my original month. That is a very quick run through of all the drawing tools. We have another few minutes for questions if anybody has any.