The elements you’ve selected in the table can be actioned in multiple ways.
Select one or more rows. The selection actions are shown at the far bottom left of the data table.
Bulk Actions UI
A. Count of selected rows
B. Add selection to project (as geometries)
C. Create Project
D. Create Multiple Projects
E. Create layer
F. Zoom to selection bounds
G. Export selected
Add to Map
Click “Add to current project’ (plus button) with any number of rows selected.
The geometries will be added to the project as generic polygons, which you can further edit by applying Usages, using Flows, or editing Appearance Properties.
🚨 Note: there is a 300 feature limit to creating polygon features
Create Project
Click “Add to new project” (single arrow button) to create a new project with that polygon as the boundary.
With multiple polygons selected, click “Add all to new project" to create a new project with a boundary that encompasses the outmost perimeter of all shapes selected.
When the "save project" flyout appears, fill out the project info, and click "save"
Create Multiple Projects
Click “create multiple projects from selection” (double arrow button) to create one project from each polygon.
When the save project flyout appears, you can switch between projects to add different information to each before saving.
Create Layer
Use the selected elements to create a new static data layer.
Click "new layer from selection"
Input the layer name.
Make it a temp layer if you do not want it to save to the project.
Uncheck temp to make a permanent static layer.
Zoom to bounds
Sometimes your selection may not be shown in the current map view. Quickly find your selection with the zoom to button.
Export
Select rows from the data table to export as CSV, so you can use the information elsewhere.
Click "export"
Select your export method:
Export selected: Export selected table rows
Export visible: Export all table rows with only visible columns
Export all: Export the entire table and all columns
A CSV downloads to your computer downloads directory.






