Release Notes RiverSMART 1.9
Enhancements
Users now have the ability to select which simulation output (RDF, CSV and NetCDF) files are post-processed. The post-processing dialog contains a tree view of the output files (organized by type) with check boxes; only those files which are checked are post-processed. The selection is saved in the study file.
Users can now insert RCL commands in the RCL script which is used to initialize a model file for a particular scenario. The RiverWare plugin configuration dialog now has controls which enable users to specify:
• Whether commands should be inserted.
• Where commands should be inserted (after model load or after pre-run DMIs have been invoked).
• The commands.
Scenarios can now be archived as ZIP files after they’ve been successfully simulated or post-processed. A new options dialog has controls which enable users to specify:
• Whether scenarios should be archived.
• When scenarios should be archived (after simulation or after post-processing).
• The archive directory.
• Whether to remove scenario folders after the scenarios are archived.
• Whether to remove archive files if a subsequent simulation or post-processing fails.
The Delete key now deletes the selected workspace entities. The enhancement is actually the addition of a generic key handling mechanism, of which the Delete key is the first implemented. This approach will make it easier to add other keys in the future.
Bug Fixes
RiverSMART has logic which attempts to save and restore the workspace view (the visible rectangle, zoom level, etc.) The logic had a distinct “drift” to the left and up which limited the feature’s utility. The drift has been largely eliminated. (There’s still a small amount, perhaps a pixel, but not enough to make the feature useless.)
Table 1.6 Issues addressed
Number | Summary |
---|
Unfiled | RiverSMART has logic which attempts to save and restore the workspace view (the visible rectangle, zoom level, etc.) The logic had a distinct “drift” to the left and up which limited the feature’s utility. The drift has been largely eliminated. (There’s still a small amount, perhaps a pixel, but not enough to make the feature useless.) |