Relativity User Guide


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Relativity User Guide | Manualzz

User Guide

September 21, 2017 - Version 9.5

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For the most recent version of this document, visit our

documentation website

.

Table of Contents

1 User guide overview

1.1 Navigation

1.1.1 Logging in

1.1.2 Tab navigation

1.1.3 User options

1.1.4 New UI framework

1.1.5 Core reviewer interface

1.1.6 Resetting your password

1.1.7 Favorites

1.1.8 Quick nav

1.1.9 Quick nav functionality

1.2 Logging in to Relativity

1.2.1 Password only

1.2.2 Password: two factor

1.2.3 Active Directory

1.2.4 Integrated Authentication

1.2.5 Client Certificate

1.2.6 RSA

1.2.7 OpenID Connect

1.2.8 SAML 2.0

1.2.9 Creating or resetting a password

1.2.10 Logging in to Relativity with a password

2 History

2.1 History view fields

2.2 Filters on the History tab

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2.3 Audited actions

3 Indented lists

4 Inline tagging

4.1 Adding a tag to a transcript

4.2 Viewing tags in a transcript

4.3 Removing a tag from a transcript

5 Markups

5.1 Highlights

5.1.1 Creating highlights

5.2 Redactions

5.2.1 Creating basic redactions

5.2.2 Creating inverse redactions

5.2.3 Creating full-page redactions

5.2.4 Creating mass redactions

5.3 Editing markups

5.3.1 Working with overlapping markups

5.3.2 Editing redaction text

5.3.3 Editing font size in text box redactions

5.4 Mass deleting markups

5.5 Controlling markup visibility

5.6 Viewing markup history

5.7 Using the Markup Navigation pane

6 Persistent highlight sets

6.1 Getting started with persistent highlight sets

6.1.1 Showing and hiding persistent highlight sets in the viewer

6.1.2 Navigating highlighted terms in the viewer

6.1.3 Persistent highlight set behavior across viewer modes

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6.2 Creating persistent highlight sets

6.2.1 Fields

6.3 Entering highlight terms

6.3.1 Color-coding persistent highlights

6.3.2 Guidelines for adding terms or phrases

6.4 Using the highlight fields source

6.4.1 Best practices

6.5 Importing search terms for persistent highlighting

6.5.1 Relativity component setup

6.5.2 Importing terms

6.6 Creating efficient searches for persistent highlighting

7 Search terms reports

7.1 Guidelines for using search terms reports

7.2 Creating a search terms report

7.2.1 Fields

7.2.2 Adding or editing terms and highlight colors

7.2.3 Using check syntax

7.2.4 Deleting terms

7.3 Running a search terms report

7.3.1 Search terms report status

7.4 Accessing tagged documents using the Field Tree browser

7.5 Using tagged search terms in a saved search

8 Searching overview

8.1 Search conditions

8.1.1 Setting up search conditions

8.1.2 Canceling queries

8.1.3 Frequently asked searching questions

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9 Summary reports

9.1 Creating and editing a summary report

9.2 Fields

10 Tabs

10.1 Creating and editing tabs

10.2 Fields

10.3 Nesting tabs

10.4 Assigning a GUID to an object

11 Transcripts

11.1 Importing transcripts

11.2 Word index

11.3 Links

11.3.1 Adding a link to a transcript

12 Viewer

12.1 Viewer mode

12.1.1 Copying text in the viewer

12.2 Native mode

12.3 Image mode

12.3.1 Saving an image as a PDF

12.4 Extracted text mode

12.5 Productions mode

12.6 Imaging on the fly

12.6.1 Image-on-the-fly process

12.7 Stand-alone document viewer

12.8 Related items pane

12.9 Thumbnail viewer

12.10 Adding information to CaseMap

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12.10.1 Adding a document to CaseMap

12.10.2 Adding a fact to CaseMap

12.10.3 Modifying field mapping for facts

12.11 Relativity Compare

12.12 Viewer-supported file types

12.12.1 Text only designation

12.12.2 File ID only designation

12.12.3 File identification values in Outside In 2016.2

12.12.4 File types supported in Oracle 2016.2

13 Workspaces

13.0.1 Relativity Downloads

13.0.2 Re-run Event Handlers

13.1 Workspace admin group

13.2 Adding workspaces to a client domain

13.3 Workspace navigation

13.3.1 Browser panel

13.3.2 View bar

13.3.3 Item list

13.3.4 Document set information bar

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1 User guide overview

When working with Relativity as a reviewer, it's important to familiarize yourself with the software's many features.

This guide outlines Relativity’s capabilities and walks you through how you can best use Relativity for document review, from logging in to creating a word index inside a workspace.

1.1 Navigation

Relativity is a complex application with many screens and functions. This section describes the main core reviewer interface you use to review documents as well as some of the standard procedures you'll need to perform as you use the product.

1.1.1 Logging in

Relativity offers several ways to log in and it's possible to have two or more methods available to you. Your system admin will provide you with all the information you need to log on. Contact your system admin if you have additional questions.

For procedures to log in, see Logging in to Relativity.

1.1.2 Tab navigation

When you log in to Relativity, you see a tab strip at the top of the page. This tab strip displays the currently available tabs whether you are in Home or Workspaces mode. The active tab is indicated by a bright blue background, while inactive tabs have a navy background.

Tabs appear from left to right in the order identified by the Order setting for each tab.

1.1.2.1 Parent and child tab display

Parent tabs are indicated by a drop-down arrow to the right of the tab name.

Click the drop-down arrow to display a vertical list of the child tabs owned by that parent tab.

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When you select a child tab (for example, Markup Sets) from the list, you're taken to that page, and all child tabs appear horizontally under the active parent tab.

Instead of clicking the drop-down arrow, you can also click the parent tab itself. Clicking the parent tab takes you to the default child tab, which is identified by the Order setting for each child tab. All child tabs then appear horizontally under the active parent tab.

1.1.2.2 Overflow tab menu

The number of tabs that appear in the tab strip depends on the size of the browser window. If the window is wide enough, the full set of tabs appears. As you reduce the size of the window, or if you have a large number of tabs in your workspace, an overflow drop-down icon appears at the right edge of the tab strip to house the remaining tabs.

Click this overflow icon to display a drop-down of the remaining tabs. If the number of tabs exceeds the height of the drop-down, a vertical scroll bar appears, allowing you to view the full set of tabs.

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Parent tabs in the overflow menu are indicated by a drop-down arrow to the right of the tab name.

Click the drop-down to display the child tabs for that parent.

You can select a child tab to navigate directly to that tab, or you can select the parent tab name to navigate to the default child tab. The default child tab is identified by the tab order setting on each tab.

While working with the overflow tabs menu, a set of double vertical lines appears on the left edge of the right-most tab. This indicates that you selected the tab from the overflow menu. If you select a different tab from the overflow menu, the tab you select replaces the previous tab.

When you click the icon to display the overflow tab menu, the icon changes to an X. Click this icon to collapse the overflow tab menu.

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1.1.3 User options

When you first log in to Relativity, you see the default Home tab. Relativity displays the Workspaces tab as your default Home tab when you navigate to Home, but you can change the default Home tab to be any tab you want. See

Navigation on page 7

for more information.

You can click your name in the upper-right corner to see the user drop-down menu.

The Relativity Instances section includes federated instances you have access to. Federated instances links allow reviewers to easily switch to other Relativity environments.

The last section contains the following two links you can use to customize the look of your workspace: n n

Try the new UI! - switches your workspace view to the new UI framework.

Switch to Classic UI - switches your workspace view to the classic UI framework.

Note: This link automatically updates depending which view your workspace is in.

1.1.3.1 Changing the default Home tab

Relativity displays the Workspaces tab as your default Home tab when you navigate to Home, but you can change the default Home tab to be any tab you want.

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Perform the following steps to change the default Home tab:

1. From Home, click the Admin Workspace Configuration tab.

2. Click the Tabs tab.

3. Click the tab you want to set as the default Home tab.

4. Click Edit.

5. Select Yes in the Is Default drop-down menu.

6. Click Save.

Note: If a user is not a member of a group with permission to view the tab set as the default Home tab,

Relativity redirects to the lowest ordered tab the user's permissions allow.

1.1.3.2 My settings

Clicking My Settings from within the user drop-down menu opens a settings mode pop-up, which displays your user information. Click Edit to change your settings.

n n

First name - your first name.

Last name - your last name.

Note: Your first and last name appear as your username throughout Relativity.

n n n n n n

Email address - your email address and login.

Skip Default Preference - When reviewing documents, skip prevents a reviewer seeing documents that are already coded (depending on the selected view). See Document skip in the Admin guide.Choose

one of the following options: o o

Normal - this setting disables the skip feature.

Skip - this setting turns on the skip future.

Default Filter Visibility - determines whether or not the filters for columns in views display by default.

o o

Hidden - hides filters by default.

Visible - displays filters by default.

Item list page length - a numeric field indicating the default list length for all lists in Relativity. It can be set from 1 to 200.

Default Selected File Type - the default viewer mode (Viewer, Native, Image, Long Text, or Production).

See

Viewer on page 84

for details.

Default Saved Search Owner - determines whether saved searches are public or private by default. If set to Public, the search is public and all users with rights to it can see it. If set to Logged in User, the search is private and only the logged in user is able to see it.

Note: Depending on your permissions, you may not have rights to edit the Default Saved

Search Owner field.

n

Native Viewer Cache Ahead - if checked, this field pre-loads the next native document in your review queue when the active document is loaded.

After changing your settings as needed, click Save.

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1.1.4 New UI framework

The new UI framework is enabled by default in Relativity 9.5. To use the classic UI framework, click

Switch to Classic UI in the User Options drop-down. You can access help documentation pertaining to the classic UI at https://help.relativity.com/9.3/Content/index.htm

.

1.1.4.1 Dashboards

When you've created a page configuration you'd like to preserve, you can create a customized dashboard. You can save multiple dashboards to quickly change the page configuration. The item list and any widgets on the dashboard will update automatically in response to filtering or searching.

(Click to expand.)

Note: You must enable the new UI framework from the user drop-down before you can use Dashboard functionality.

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The page initially appears with the folder browser on the top left, the search panel on the bottom left and the item list to the right. Within this new framework, you have multiple options for customizing your display.

You can resize, move, or collapse any panel on the page, including any widgets you create.

n n

To resize any panel, hover over the line separating the item list from the panel until you see the mouse pointer change to horizontal arrows, then click and drag.

To move, hover over the top of the panel until you see the icon. Then, click and drag the panel to the new location.

n

To collapse the search panel or browser pane, click the icon. Once collapsed, click the icon to restore the browser pane or the icon to restore the search panel.

Additionally, you can drag and drop panels to rearrange on the page. Click any panel and drag it to a new location. The other panels will automatically move to accommodate the panel you're dropping.

Note: You must have the correct workspace permissions to add, edit, or save a dashboard and to save pivot widgets to your dashboard.

You can also export individual Pivot widgets to Excel or to PNG format from each widget's context menu.

SeeExporting a Pivot widget in the Admin Guide for more information.

Note: To enable the Add Widgets button and Pivot functionality for an Relativity Dynamic Object (RDO), you must select Enabled for the Pivot property in the Object Type Information section for the object.

Creating a dashboard

To create a dashboard:

1. Click the Dashboards drop-down in the top right corner of the screen.

2. Click New Dashboard to save the current page configuration as a new dashboard.

3. Enter a name and an order number for the dashboard.

Note: The dashboard with the lowest order number will appear by default when you log in to Relativity.

Adding widgets to a dashboard

You can add the following widgets to customize your dashboard: n n

Pivot charts and tables - You can use Pivot to summarize data in tables or charts to visually analyze trends in your data. 

Cluster visualizations - On the Documents tab, you can use Relativity Cluster Visualization to render your cluster data as an interactive visual map by adding a Cluster Visualization widget. This allows you to get a quick overview of your document cluster sets and quickly drill into each cluster set to view subclusters and conceptually-related clusters of documents. Please note that there may be only one cluster visualization widget per dashboard.

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Note: When you reach the maximum number of widgets allowed on a dashboard, the Add Widget button will be grayed out and a tooltip displays when you hover over it that lets you know the reason you cannot add any additional widgets to your dashboard. This is controlled by the

MaxNumberDashboardWidgets

instance setting.

Saving changes to a dashboard

You can also make changes on the fly and save a dashboard with the changes. If a dashboard has not been saved, an orange notification displays in the Dashboard drop-down until it is saved.

1. Click the Dashboards drop-down in the top right corner of the screen to display the list of dashboards available on the current tab.

2. Click Save to save the changes to the existing dashboard. Click Save As to save the page configuration as a new dashboard, and then enter a Name and Order number.

Note: If a dashboard is part of a locked application, the option to save the dashboard is unavailable.

Deleting a dashboard

To delete a dashboard from the current tab you are in, click the icon to the right of the dashboard you want to delete in the Dashboards drop-down.

Click Delete in the Delete Dashboard Confirmation popup to delete the dashboard.

Note: If a dashboard is part of a locked application, the option to delete the dashboard is unavailable.

Renaming a dashboard

To rename a dashboard:

1. Click on the icon next to the name of the dashboard in the Dashboard drop-down.

2. Enter a Name and an Order number for the dashboard. The order number controls the order in which the dashboard displays in the list.

3. Click Save to save your changes.

Note: If a dashboard is part of a locked application, the option to edit the dashboard is unavailable.

Dashboards and locked applications

If a dashboard is part of a locked application, a icon appears to the right of the dashboard.

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Click the icon to view a list of locked applications the dashboard is associated with.

1.1.4.2 Using the search panel

While working in the Document list in the new UI framework, you can use the search panel to filter your data.

1.1.5 Core reviewer interface

To open a document in the core reviewer interface, click on a document name or identifier on the

Documents tab.

The core reviewer interface screen consists of the following areas:

1. Document view selector

2. Viewer

3. Navigation bar

4. Layouts

5. Related Items pane

6. Persistent Highlight Sets

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You can toggle between several viewing options by using the icons in the upper-right corner of the window.

n n n n n n n

Keyboard shortcuts legend - displays the keyboard shortcuts legend for the workspace.

Enable/disable keyboard shortcuts - enables and disables keyboard shortcuts for the workspace.

Show/hide document list - show or hide the document list from the Core Reviewer Interface.

Dock/undock document viewer - docks or undocks the viewer from the Core Reviewer Interface.

Swap panes - flips the Viewer from the left side of the window to the right or vice-versa.

Launch stand-alone document viewer - pops out a static standalone version of the Viewer.

Show/hide tab strip - shows or hides the tab strip.

You can move through a set of documents by using the navigation menu located in the upper-right corner of the core reviewer interface.

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You can type a number into the textbox and hit Enter to move to that document. You can also use the navigation arrows:

Top of first page Previous page Next page Last page

You can't browse past the last document in your returned set. For example, in the above screenshot, you can't use the navigation arrows to get to document 1,001.

1.1.6 Resetting your password

There are two ways you can reset your password if your system admin has given you the appropriate permissions. You can use the Reset Password option inside Relativity or the Forgot

your password? link on the Relativity login screen.

Note: If your password has expired, the Reset Password dialog appears automatically when you log in to

Relativity. Your system admin determines when your password expires and the number of previous passwords that you can't reuse.

1.1.6.1 Resetting your password inside Relativity

If you're already logged in to Relativity, you can reset your password by clicking Reset Password in the Home drop-down menu. This directs you to a Reset Password pop-up.

Enter your old password, then enter and retype your new password. Click Save.

You can use your new password next time you log in to Relativity.

1.1.6.2 Resetting your password outside Relativity

If you can't log in to Relativity because you've forgotten your password, perform the following steps to reset your password.

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1. Click Forgot your password? on the login screen.

2. Enter your email address in the pop-up.

Relativity sends an email to the address you provide. You should receive this message within a few minutes. If you don't receive an email, check your spam or junk mail folder.

3. Click the link in the email to reset your password. This link will be active for 15 minutes and expires after that time. If the link has expired, or if you click the link more than once, you'll have to generate a new password reset request.

4. The link directs you to a page where you can create a new password.

5. Enter a new password and retype it, then click Submit. After your password successfully resets, you'll get a message prompting you to log in with your new password. An email will be sent to the address you entered, notifying you that your password reset was successful.

1.1.7 Favorites

The Favorites menu contains all your bookmarks (Favorites) and the last 10 pages in your browsing history (Recents). The Favorites menu appears at the top of the application window next to your username.

Use Favorites to quickly navigate the Relativity application. If you visit a particular page on a regular basis, minimize the number of clicks it takes to get there by adding the page as a favorite.

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To mark a page a favorite, click the gray star next to Favorites, or click the gray star next to a page name in the Recents section. The star turns yellow and Relativity adds the page to the Favorites section. Relativity doesn't limit the number of pages you can mark as a favorite.

Relativity records pages in the Recents section on each page load. That means that pop-up windows aren't recorded as Recents.

Using Favorites

Imagine you're a system admin whose duties include resetting passwords for an average of 20 to 30 users per day. You could navigate to the Administration tab, then click the Users tab each time a password reset request comes through the queue, but instead you create a favorites bookmark to easily jump you the Users tab from any tab in Relativity you might be working on.

You create favorites bookmarks for all of the tabs that you most frequently visit optimizing your productivity.

Note: If you're a system admin, you can turn off this feature by editing the RecentHistoryEnabled and

FavoritesEnabled instance setting values. You can also change the number of Recents the Favorites menu displays by editing the RecentHistoryNumberOfItemsDisplays instance setting value.

1.1.8 Quick nav

Quick nav allows you to quickly search for and navigate to any workspace or tab in Relativity. To access quick nav, click in the upper right corner of Relativity, or use the keyboard shortcut Ctrl+/.

Note: Verify that the quick nav Ctrl+/ keyboard shortcut works on custom pages. Contact Client Services with any problems.

Open quick nav, and type the name of any tab or workspace.

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Any tab or workspace that contains the character string within the name appears in the list of results. Results appear after you type more than one character, and they refine with each character you type. The results link you directly to the tab or workspace in Relativity.

Note: In Relativity terms, the search works the same as a leading and trailing wildcard search.

You can click on any result or use the up and down arrow keys to move through the results. Press

Enter to navigate to the selected item.

Your search remains until the page is refreshed or you navigate to a new tab. The Esc key also clears your search from quick nav. If no text is entered in the quick nav search field, Esc closes quick nav. You can also click anywhere outside the quick nav window to close it.

Quick nav displays three types of results in the following order: n

Workspace tabs - lists all workspace tabs that fit the search criteria and are available with your permission settings.

Note: This item only appears when you are in a workspace.

n n

Admin Tabs - lists all admin tabs that fit the search criteria and are available with your permission settings.

Workspaces - lists all workspaces that fit the search criteria and are available with your permission settings. Click the workspace to go to the default tab for that workspace.

Quick nav results only reflect items available with your permission settings.

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Using quick nav

Imagine you're a system admin in a workspace within Relativity, and a user emails you with a password reset request. You press Ctrl+/ and type the letters “use”. The results filter to only contain Admin and Workspace tab names with the letters u-s-e.

The results display a Users tab in the Admin tabs section. You click the Users tab and find the user who needs a password reset in the list. Once their password is reset, you use quick nav to get back to the workspace you were previously working in.

1.1.9 Quick nav functionality

The following list highlights more features of quick nav functionality.

n n n n n

Type the word "home" in quick nav to navigate to your default Home tab.

Quick nav is enabled or disabled with the QuickNavEnabled instance setting.

Quick nav is available to look up workspaces and admin tabs from Home for groups assigned the Use

Quick Nav admin permission, and it is available to look up tabs in a workspace for groups assigned the

Use Quick Nav workspace permission.

The maximum number of returned quick nav search results is limited to any number between 2 and 50, but the default is 20. Use the QuickNavMaxResults instance setting setting to adjust the maximum number of results.

The maximum number of searchable characters is 50.

1.2 Logging in to Relativity

Relativity offers several ways to log in and it's possible to have two or more methods available to you. As a Relativity user, your system admin provides you with all the information you need to log in.

n n n

Active Directory on the next page

Integrated Authentication on page 23

RSA on page 23

1.2.1 Password only

This method uses only a username and a password. Your system admin provides you with: n n your log in email address a password request email

Prior to logging in, if you've not already, create your password. See

Creating or resetting a password on page 24

.

To log in:

1. Navigate to the Relativity site.

2. Log in with your password. See

Logging in to Relativity with a password on page 27

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1.2.2 Password: two factor

The two factor password method requires a passcode in addition to the username and password.

The systems emails you the passcode during log in and is different each time. Your system admin provides you with: n n your login email address a password request email

Prior to logging in, if you've not already, create your password. See

Creating or resetting a password on page 24

.

To log in:

1. Navigate to the Relativity site.

2. Log in with your password. An Authenticate Login dialog appears. The system immediately emails you a passcode. 

3. Enter that value in Passcode.

4. Click Login.

1.2.3 Active Directory

This method uses Microsoft Active Directory Domain Services to log in. You must log in from a computer within a valid domain. Your system admin provides you with: n n your login email address an account on a Windows domain

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n a Windows network password

To log in:

1. Navigate to the Relativity site.

2. Enter your Relativity email address in Username.

3. Click Continue.

4. Enter your Windows network password in Password.

Contact your system admin or IT department for password requirements.

5. Click Login.

1.2.4 Integrated Authentication

This method uses Integrated Windows Authentication to log in. There are no additional requirements to log in other than having a Windows domain account.

To log in, navigate to the Relativity site. The system automatically logs you in to Relativity. If you are not connected or if the

Relativity logon dialog

appears, contact your system admin.

1.2.5 Client Certificate

To use this method, you must have a configured smart card and a computer with a smart card reader. Your system admin provides you with: n n n n n a personalized smart card a PIN a smart card reader the client certificate name the client certificate button name

To log in:

1. Insert the smart card into the card reader.

2. Navigate to the Relativity site.

3. Enter your username in Username.

4. Click the client certificate button name that your system admin indicated.

5. Select the certificate name that your system admin indicated.

6. Click OK.

7. Enter your PIN associated with your card.

8. Click OK.

1.2.6 RSA

This method requires an RSA SecurID token along with a username and passcode. Your system admin provides you with: n n n your username an RSA SecurID token optionally a PIN

To log in:

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1. Navigate to the Relativity site.

2. Enter your username in Username.

3. Click Continue.

4. Enter your RSA password in Password.

This password is either the RSA tokencode (the eight digit number from the RSA SecurID token hardware) if you have not been assigned or created a PIN, or your combined PIN and RSA tokencode without a space between them. Your system admin will tell you which format to use.

5. Click Login.

You may also be asked to create or to reset your PIN. Follow the instructions on those screens.

1.2.7 OpenID Connect

This method requires you to have an OpenID Connect account. Your system provides you with: n n an OpenID Connect account the Relativity OpenID Connect button name

To log in:

1. Navigate to the Relativity site.

2. Click the Relativity OpenID Connect button name.

3. Enter your username.

4. Click Logon.

1.2.8 SAML 2.0

This method requires you to have a SAML 2.0 account. Your system admin provides you with: n n a SAML 2.0 account the Relativity SAML 2.0 button name

To log in:

1. Click the Relativity SAML 2.0 button name.

2. Enter your username.

3. Click Logon.

1.2.9 Creating or resetting a password

Use this procedure if you're logging in to Relativity for the first time or if you're resetting your password. Your system admin must send you a password reset email. If you forget your password, you can click the Forgot your password link on the logon screen if it is available, or contact your system admin. In either case, the system sends you a new password email.

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1. Within the password request email, click Reset Password or enter the full URL into your browser.

2. Enter a password following the restrictions listed on the screen. You must remember this password to log in. The link within the email is valid for 15 minutes, and you can only use the most recent email.

Although, once the password is set, you don't have to log in immediately.

Note: The following non-alpha-numeric characters are not allowed: \, ", <, > in passwords.

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5. Click Submit.

6. Click Return to Relativity.

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1.2.10 Logging in to Relativity with a password

1. Enter your Username.

2. Click Continue.

3. Enter your password

4. Click Logon.

Note: The Forgot your password? link only displays if the admin enables Allow Password Recovery via

Email setting, for more information see Authentication .

2 History

On the History tab, you can view the actions of users throughout the workspace. Relativity has a comprehensive audit system that logs actions that users perform, object types, timestamps, and other details. This tab also includes views and filters to help you navigate through the audit records.

Note: When you view a document in the Core Reviewer Interface, you can display its history in the related items pane by selecting the Document History icon.

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Using history

You’re a system admin and you recently had to let one of your reviewers go after it was discovered that he'd insufficiently redacted sensitive information contained in a large group of documents right before you were planning to produce those documents and send them to the presiding judge. In addition to going back and correctly applying that reviewer's redactions, you need to look up all the other places in the workspace in which he might have incorrectly coded documents or, in general, entered inaccurate information.

To find all areas in the workspace that this reviewer touched, you navigate to the Administration tab, then to the History tab. Since he'd been working on this project for at least a month, you change the view from its default of Document Updates - Last 7 Days to All History. Then you simply filter the User Name field and select the name of the reviewer.

When the results come back, you notice that this reviewer was particularly active and that there are over 1,000 user actions attached to his name. To ensure that none of these actions compromised any other segment of the review project or skewed information intended to be used as evidence, you need to review each one. To help in this effort, you enlist two of your more reliable reviewers to go through this list of History items and check the departed reviewer's clicks.

2.1 History view fields

You can customize the views available on the History tab or create new views as necessary. The

History tab includes pre-configured views for recently updated documents, long running queries, and imaging history, which you can modify.

The following fields are available in views on this tab: n n n n n n n n

Action - the user activity captured in the audit record.

Artifact ID - the artifact ID of the audit action.

Details - the detailed description of the audit action.

Execution time - the length of time in milliseconds for a document query to run.

ID - the identifier for the audited item; each tracked action has its own unique identifier.

Name - the name of the object.

Object type - the type of object.

Request origination - the connection details for the user that sent the change request.

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n n

Timestamp - the date and time when the audit action occurred.

User name - the user who initiated the action.

You can export the contents of a view to Excel using at the top of the screen. Only the currentlyloaded records are included in the Excel file. For example, in the following workspace, only 1,000 records would be included instead of the full 2,501 records.

Some features' history views are more detailed.

n n

For more information, see Saved search history in the Searching Guide.

For more information on imaging history, see Imaging history in the Admin guide.

2.2 Filters on the History tab

On the History tab, you can search for specific audit records by using filters just as you would on other tabs. For more information on filtering, see Filters in the Searching Guide.

You can also search for choice values using the Details Filter. Actions related to field choices are recorded using Artifact ID. To display the Artifact ID for choice values, click the Choice Legend icon in the view bar.

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On the Choice Legend popup, you can search for choices in the workspace, their artifact IDs, and their associated fields. You can then enter Artifact ID listed for a choice value in the Details Filter and filter the audit records. For example, you would use the Artifact ID 2881180 to filter on the Issue choice "Responsive."

Note: You can also use views to filter audit records. See

History view fields on page 28

.

2.3 Audited actions

The following table lists audited actions in Relativity:

Note: If you perform a job while previewing a user's security settings, the audit action will be credited to your user name and not to the user whose security you were previewing when you started the job.

Action name Description of activity

CaseMap - Add Document A document was sent to CaseMap.

CaseMap - Add Fact A selection of text from the viewer was sent to CaseMap as a fact.

Conversion Complete

Create

A file was converted by way of a user clicking on a file link in the document list, running an imaging set, imaging on the fly, running a mass image operation, or switching to text or production mode in the viewer.

An item was created.

Delete

Document Query

Export

An item was deleted.

A query was run on a list of documents, or a document query was canceled. (A message indicating that a query was canceled is displayed in the details and on the Query Text pop-up.)

The contents of a production set, saved search, folder, or subfolder were exported.

Images - Created

File Download

File Upload

Images were created.

A file was downloaded through the Single File Upload application. For example, a user clicked Download File on the Error Actions console of an individual processing error layout.

A file was uploaded through the Single File Upload application. For example, a user clicked Upload Replacement File on the Error Actions console of an individual

Relativity | User Guide - 30

Action name

Images - Created for Production

Images - Deleted

Description of activity

processing error layout.

Images corresponding to a production outside of Relativity were imported into the system.

Images were deleted.

Import

Markup - Image - Modified

Content associated with a load, production, or image file was imported.

Markup - Image - Created Redactions or highlights were added to an image.

Markup - Image - Deleted Redactions or highlights were removed from an image.

Redactions or highlights were moved, resized or edited on an image.

Markup - Native - Created Redactions or highlights were added. This audit entry applies to transcripts only.

Markup - Native - Deleted Redactions or highlights were removed. This audit entry applies to transcripts only.

Markup - Native -

Updated

Move

Redactions or highlights were moved, resized or edited. This audit entry applies to transcripts only.

A document was moved from one folder to another.

Native - Created

Native - Deleted

Pivot Query

Print

Production - Add Document

A native file was loaded into Relativity.

A native file was removed from Relativity.

A Pivot report was run, or a Pivot report was canceled. (A message indicating that a query was canceled is displayed in the details and on the Query Text pop-up.)

A document was printed.

A document was added to a production.

Production - Remove

Document

A document was removed from a production.

Query A process ran a query (such as categorization), or a query was canceled. (A message indicating that a query was canceled is displayed in the details and on the

Query Text pop-up.)

RelativityScriptExecution A Relativity script was run.

ReportQuery

Run

Search Cache Table

Creation

Security

Tally/Sum/Average

Update

A summary report was run.

A file was imaged, saved as a PDF, or otherwise converted for viewing

A search cache table was created. (Search cache tables are created the first time you search for a term or phrase using dtSearch or Relativity Analytics.)

Security rights were assigned or changed

The mass operation Tally/Sum/Average was run in the workspace.

Document metadata was updated on a single-document basis. In addition, filters on information related to applications installed through the workspace or by an agent.

Update - Mass Edit Document metadata was updated on a mass basis.

Update - Mass Replace Document metadata was edited using a text mass replacement.

Update - Propagation

View

Document metadata was edited according to a propagation rule.

A document was viewed.

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Action name

Workspace Upgrade

Description of activity

Details about scripts run on a workspace during an upgrade.

Note: No login action exists when you access a workspace. Relativity interprets the login based on any other auditable action in the workspace. For example, if you view a document in Workspace A, Relativity audits that view action on the History tab and indicates that a user accessed Workspace A.

3 Indented lists

Indented lists provide additional information to users by displaying levels within a relationship, such as an email conversation thread. Viewing a list in the indented hierarchy makes it easier to understand the email order in a family.

Indented items are grouped together using the Group Definition field to separate email threads groups with a thick blue line. You can define indented lists based on any related items field.

Indented lists are available in the document item as pictured below and in the related items pane in

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the Viewer.

Also see this related recipe:

4 Inline tagging

With inline tagging you can tag sections of text within a transcript that you can then reference through hyperlinks. If a record is large and covers many topics, it may be difficult to identify which part of the record relates to which issue. For example, issue coding is a common task. With inline tagging, you can create tags named after the issues in your case, and tag specific sections of documents as relating to those issues.

Inline tagging is only available for transcripts. See

Transcripts on page 82 . For information on using

layouts to code non-transcript documents, see Layouts in the Admin guide.

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Note: If you want to add inline tagging to a transcript, you must first process the transcripts using the

Process Transcripts mass action.

Using inline tagging

Imagine you're analyzing documents, looking for content related to the issues of "contracts" and

"buildings". You encounter a document that you want to apply both issues to, but you want to call out the specific areas in the document.

Because tags allow you to label individual pieces of text as related to different issues, you decide to use inline tagging. You highlight "signed this contract", right-click, select Tag, and choose the

"contracts" tag.

You want to tag the mention of construction as "buildings", so you repeat the same process.

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You've now applied two tags to the same document. To view the tags you applied, you click the tag list icon to bring up the tag list pane, which shows all the tags in the document.

When you click the hyperlinked entries in the pane, the active tag appears in blue in the viewer.

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4.1 Adding a tag to a transcript

To add a tag to a processed transcript:

1. Open a transcript from the Documents tab.

2. Highlight the text you want to tag.

3. Right-click on the selected text, and click Tag.

4. Select the checkbox next to the tag(s) you want to apply.

5. Click Save.

4.2 Viewing tags in a transcript

To view all the tags in a transcript:

1. Open a transcript from the Documents tab.

2. Click the tag icon in the lower right corner.

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4.3 Removing a tag from a transcript

To remove a tag from a transcript:

1. Open a transcript from the Documents tab.

2. Right-click on the tag in the document.

3. Click Remove.

5 Markups

Markups in Relativity refer to

highlights

and

redactions

. You can add markups to documents using the Relativity image viewer. When you open a document in the core reviewer interface, select

Image to image the document if necessary and open the document as an image.

Note: If two people edit a markup at the same time, an error occurs.

Using markups

You’re a reviewer at a law firm, and one of your firm’s clients, a construction company, is involved in litigation regarding the use of materials that they weren’t informed were potentially environmentally damaging when they purchased them from a major supplier.

Included in the data set are many invoices from the past year that contain the various department and personal credit cards numbers used to purchased said materials, as well as a few instances of social security numbers used in conjunction with those cards.

These invoices are crucial pieces of evidence that your firm plans on producing and handing over to the judge. Before those documents can be produced, however, you need to go through them and find all instances of credit card and social security numbers and apply redactions to those instances, as this is sensitive information.

Your system admin has already set up a view specifically for invoices, bank statements, and other files related to purchases and accounts. To redact any sensitive information contained in these documents, you open them in the Viewer and scan the imaged document for instances of said numbers. When you come across them, you select the black redaction and draw it over the number or list of numbers you need to obscure.

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Now there’s no danger of your production being tainted by inadvertently revealing this sensitive information, which in some cases could render the produced documents inadmissible.

5.1 Highlights

When you create a highlight, a colored box appears in the area you select, just like using a highlighter.

5.1.1 Creating highlights

To create a highlight, perform the following steps:

1. Click . Yellow is the default color. Click the drop-down menu to select a different color.

2. Draw the highlight across the section(s) of text you want to highlight.

When you create a highlight, it appears in the Markup Navigation Pane. See

Using the Markup

Navigation pane on page 44

.

5.2 Redactions

A redaction hides text on a page. In Relativity, you can create several different types of redactions: n n

Creating basic redactions on the next page

Creating inverse redactions on the next page

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n n

Creating full-page redactions on the next page

Creating mass redactions on the next page

When you create a redaction, it appears in the Markup Navigation Pane. See

Using the Markup

Navigation pane on page 44

.

5.2.1 Creating basic redactions

To apply a basic redaction to a document, perform the following steps:

1. Click . The black redaction tool is the default. Click the drop-down menu to select a different tool.

You can select from the following: n n n

Black - creates a solid black box, like using a black marker. While you draw the box, a gray translucent fill appears.

Cross - creates a white redaction box black border and a black X from corner to corner.

Text - creates a white redaction box with black text. The text will fill the box by default. To change the font size, keep the redaction box selected and click , and then select a new font size from the drop-down menu. You can right-click a text box redaction to apply different text.

See

Editing redaction text on page 42 . The system admin determines which text options are avail-

n able.

White - creates a solid white box with a gray border. The gray border won't be printed or produced.

2. Draw the redaction box(es) across the section(s) of the page you want to redact. You can draw in any direction.

5.2.2 Creating inverse redactions

An inverse redaction creates a black redaction across the full page except on the locations where you draw boxes. To create an inverse redaction, perform the following steps:

1. Click .

2. Draw the inverse redaction box(es) across the section(s) of the page you do not want to redact. A blue cast indicates where the black redaction is created, and the white box indicates the area that is not

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redacted. You can move or resize the white box using the controls.

5.2.3 Creating full-page redactions

A full-page redaction creates a redaction across the entire page. To apply a full-page redaction, click . The black full page redaction tool is the default. Click the drop-down menu to select a different tool. You can select from the following: n n n n

Black - creates a solid black box, like using a black marker.

Cross - creates a white redaction box with a black border and a black X from corner to corner.

Text - creates a white redaction box with black text. You can right-click a text box redaction to apply different text. See

Editing redaction text on page 42

. The system admin determines which text options are available.

White - creates a solid white box with a gray border. The gray border won't be printed or produced.

You can also create a keyboard shortcut to apply a full-page redaction. See Creating keyboard shortcuts in the Admin guide.

After you apply a full-page redaction, you can resize it to make it smaller than the full page and then work with it like a normal redaction.

5.2.4 Creating mass redactions

You can use the mass redact option to apply full-page redactions of any type to a set of pages in your document. To apply mass redactions, perform the following steps:

1. Click . The Mass Redact Options popup appears.

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2. Select the type of redaction to apply. You can select from the following: n n n n

Black - creates a solid black box, like using a black marker.

Cross - creates a white redaction box with a black border and a black X from corner to corner.

Text - creates a white redaction box with black text. In the Text Options section, you can select the font size and text to apply to the redactions. To apply custom text, select <Enter

Custom Text> from the Text drop-down menu, then enter the text in the Text field.

White - creates a solid white box with a gray border. The gray border won't be printed or produced.

3. Specify a range of images to apply the redaction to. Select Pages and enter a set of pages or select All

pages in document to apply the full-page redactions to the entire document.

4. Click OK. The redactions apply to the set of pages you specify.

5.3 Editing markups

To resize a single markup, click inside the markup shape. White dot controls appear on the corners and edges of the markup. Select any control and drag to resize the markup.

You can move or delete markups individually or as a set. To select multiple markups, click the selector tool and drag across the markups. Alternatively, press Shift or Ctrl and click to select

Relativity | User Guide - 41

individual markups, or click Ctrl + A to select all markups on an image. Controls appear on the corners and edges of all selected markups.

To move, click and drag the selected markups to a new location. You can also move selected markups using the arrow keys. Each time you hit an arrow key, the markups move 10 pixels in that direction. For finer control, hold Ctrl while pressing an arrow key, and the markups move only 1 pixel in that direction.

To delete, right-click a selected markup and click Delete. You can also press the Delete key and click

Yes on the Confirm Delete popup. All selected markups are deleted. For Mac users, press Fn +

Delete.

Note: If you have a full-page redaction applied to an image, then you apply an additional full-page redaction, the most recently applied full-page redaction appears on top. If you then delete the second redaction, the first full-page redaction persists.

5.3.1 Working with overlapping markups

If you have multiple markups on a page that overlap each other, when you hover over the markups, translucent controls appear. Click the markup you want to work with, and the controls become active to indicate which markup is active. In the following example, the black box redaction is active.

5.3.2 Editing redaction text

To edit the text in a text box redaction, perform the following steps:

1. Right-click the redaction and select Edit.

The Enter Redaction Text popup opens.

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2. Enter the new redaction text in the field and click OK.

The new text appears in the redaction.

5.3.3 Editing font size in text box redactions

The font size for text box redactions defaults to fill the entire text box. To edit the font size, perform the following steps:

1. Select the text box redaction(s). You can press Ctrl or Shift and click to select multiple text box redactions.

2. Click the Font Size tool text box redactions.

and select a font size. The font size applies to the text in all selected

When you create a new text box redaction, the last selected font size automatically applies to the text.

5.4 Mass deleting markups

You can mass delete markups from a single page, from a range of pages, or from your entire document at once using the delete redactions and highlights option. To mass delete markups, perform the following steps:

1. Click . The Mass Delete Markup Options popup appears.

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2. Select the markup types you want to delete. You can select Non full-page redactions, Full-page redac-

tions, Highlights, or any combination of these.

3. Select the range of pages from which to delete the selected markups. You can select This page, Pages

(enter a set of pages), or All pages in document.

4. Click OK. The selected markup types are deleted from the range of pages you selected.

5.5 Controlling markup visibility

You can toggle redaction visibility between visible, transparent, and invisible. Use the Change

Markup Visibility button to change the setting.

n n n

Click once to set the markups to transparent.

Click a second time to set the markups to invisible. The redactions are not deleted, just temporarily hidden.

Click a third time to return the markups to full visibility.

5.6 Viewing markup history

To view the history of any highlight or redaction, right-click it and select Show Markup History. The

Markup Information popup appears with information identifying each action, the user who performed the action, and the date and time at which the action was performed.

5.7 Using the Markup Navigation pane

In the viewer, you can locate markups in a document using the Markup Navigation pane. To open this pane, click in the lower left corner of the viewer. The Markup Navigation pane displays a

Relativity | User Guide - 44

list of all redactions and highlights that reviewers created in the document, as well as references to their page numbers and parent markup sets.

You can click the markup type hyperlink to jump to the page where the markup occurs. In addition,

Relativity updates the active markup set to the one associated with your hyperlinked selection in the

Markup Navigation pane.

6 Persistent highlight sets

With persistent highlight sets you can configure and apply term highlighting to assist with document review in the viewer. In the Persistent Highlight Pane of the viewer, you can see all sets saved in a workspace and apply or hide term highlights in the document you're reviewing.

If a document you're reviewing contains any of the terms specified in a set, the list of terms and the number of times they appear in the document appear under the set. If a document contains no terms from the set, you can't expand or collapse the set in the tree. If the document contains some terms in the set, only the terms that exist in the document appear below the set name.

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System admins can control which highlight sets different users see when working within a document. See Workspace security in the Admin guide.

Persistent highlight sets are independent of markup sets. See Markup sets in the Admin guide.

Using persistent highlight sets

You’re a system admin and one of your clients, a medical patient advocate group, is suing a hospital system because their IT department accidentally allowed a security breach that resulted in the theft of thousands of patients’ social security numbers and pieces of personal health information.

The data set you need to review for this case includes thousands of emails, invoices, and other notifications containing references to the pieces of information that were compromised in the breach. You need to equip a small group of reviewers with everything they need to find relevant documents as quickly as possible. You want your reviewers to find and code all files related to the following: n n n n n n n

Social security number

Biometrics

Medicare

Insurance

Diagnosis

Treatment

Beneficiaries

You created coding layouts, views, and search indexes, and now you want to enable your reviewers to quickly and easily locate instances of these terms in the documents they’re reviewing. For that, you use persistent highlight sets.

You create a new persistent highlight set with a name of “Patient Privacy,” which is congruent with the other objects you’ve already set up for this case. You give this set an order of 10 and you select

Terms for the Source field choice. Then, in the Terms field, you enter the terms most prevalent to the data set and the specific highlight colors in which you want those terms to appear.

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When you save this new persistent highlight set, reviewers can select it from a menu for every document they load in the Viewer. When they apply highlights, the document instantly points them to the locations of each term that appears. From there, they can easily tell if the document is responsive and if it’s worthy of being coded for some of the issues you’ve defined in this case. With this new persistent highlight set, you’ve expedited and ensured a thorough document review project.

6.1 Getting started with persistent highlight sets

You create persistent highlight sets in the Persistent Highlight Sets tab of a workspace. Each set includes a list of terms populated manually or from a source field in the set configuration. After you create a persistent highlight set, the set and its terms are available in the Persistent Highlight Pane of the viewer.

The following persistent highlight set includes several terms with highlight color-coding. See

Colorcoding persistent highlights on page 52

for more information.

This set is available when a user opens the viewer and any edits made to this set are reflected immediately. .

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6.1.1 Showing and hiding persistent highlight sets in the viewer

To view the list of available persistent highlights sets and related terms in the Persistent Highlight pane, click the Show/Hide Persistent Highlight Pane icon on the left side of the toolbar. To hide the pane, click again.

Click the + sign next to a persistent highlight set to expand it and show the list of terms from that set found in the document. By default, all persistent highlight sets are enabled in the viewer, and terms found in a document are selected in the Persistent Highlight Pane and highlighted in the document.

Click a persistent highlight set's name or the icon to hide all term highlights from the set in the

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viewer. When a persistent highlight set's icon is and the terms appear partially transparent in the

Persistent Highlight Pane, the term highlights for the set are hidden in the viewer.

Note: The Persistent Highlight pane only shows the term count for the current page open in the viewer.

Navigate between pages using the viewer paging control to view the persistent highlight term count for other pages of the open document.

Clear a term's check box to hide its highlights in the viewer. Select its check box to apply highlighting for the term in the viewer again.

If any of the set’s terms aren't present in the current document open in the viewer, they don't display in the Persistent Highlight Pane. For example, if you created a set named Investments that contains five highlight terms, and only three of the terms show in the pane for a particular document, the other two terms aren't present in the document.

When you select a persistent highlight term in the Persistent Highlight Pane, in addition to highlighting all instances of that term in the body of an email, the viewer also highlights instances of the term in the email header.

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If a document doesn't contain any terms found in a set, you won't have the + expand option for the set in the pane. It is possible to have many highlight sets enabled but no highlights appear in a document.

Selections made in the Persistent Highlight pane persist throughout a user's session in Relativity.

This includes any of the following changes related to the Persistent Highlight Pane in the viewer: n n n n

Showing or hiding the Persistent Highlight Pane.

Enabling or disabling a persistent highlight set.

Expanding or collapsing the term list for a persistent highlight set.

Checking or clearing terms check boxes in a persistent highlight set.

6.1.2 Navigating highlighted terms in the viewer

To navigate between terms highlighted on a document in the viewer, use the Go to Previous

Highlight

and Go to Next Highlight buttons on the viewer toolbar.

The Go to Previous Highlight and Go to Next Highlight buttons only navigate between terms enabled in the Persistent Highlight Pane.

When navigating through a document's highlighted terms, the following notification informs you when you reach the beginning or end of the document and there are no more highlights.

6.1.3 Persistent highlight set behavior across viewer modes

Note the following regarding persistent highlight set behavior as the reviewer moves from document to document, changes viewer modes, and uses pane toggles: n n n n

Any changes made to a persistent highlight set tree in the panel when the viewer is undocked, such as terms selected or unselected, will display when the viewer is docked again.

A synced stand-alone viewer won't display changes made to a persistent highlight set, such as terms selected or unselected, in the pane of the main viewer. However, Persistent Highlight Pane settings remain the same in the stand-alone viewer as the reviewer goes from doc to doc within the stand-alone viewer.

The Persistent Highlight Pane maintains its current state when you swap viewer panes.

The Persistent Highlight Pane in Extracted Text mode and Viewer mode are independent of each other.

A change made to the pane in Extracted Text mode is not automatically reflected when the reviewer switches to Viewer mode and vice versa.

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See the Viewer documentation in the Admin Guide.

6.2 Creating persistent highlight sets

To create a new persistent highlight set, follow these steps.

1. Select the Persistent Highlight Sets tab from a workspace.

2. Click New Persistent Highlight Set.

3. Complete all required fields in the persistent highlight set information section. See

Fields below

for details.

4. Click Save.

Note: Verify that reviewers are not actively reviewing documents when creating Persistent Highlight Sets.

Creating Persistent Highlight Sets while reviewers are actively reviewing documents can cause errors.

6.2.1 Fields

Persistent highlight sets include the following fields.

n n n

Name- the descriptive name under which you want this set to appear in the Viewer and item list.

Order -the order in which you want this set to appear.

Source - determines the area the set draws from when designating characters to be highlighted and displayed in the Viewer. There are two options:

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n n o o

Highlight Fields - designates fields as the source of highlighting. Selecting this radio button means you must select a Highlight Field in order to save this set.

Terms- designates terms as the source of highlighting. Selecting this radio button means you must enter terms into the Terms field below to save this set.

Highlight Fields- choose the field referencing the list of terms to be highlighted. Click to bring up the system view called Field Picker on Persistent Highlight Sets, which displays the Name and Object

Type for applicable multiple object fields. It also includes those created by Search Terms Reports. To select the desired Highlight Field, check the field’s box, click Add, and click Set. The field displays on the layout. See

Using the highlight fields source on page 54 .

Terms - enter terms you wish to highlight and select the color code to distinguish them in the Viewer.

See

Entering highlight terms below

.

Note: Persistent highlighting created by using search terms reports or other multiple object fields requires version 6.9 or higher Relativity and the viewer. An error message appears indicating that persistent highlighting is unavailable if you are using an incompatible version of the viewer.

6.3 Entering highlight terms

If you choose Terms as the source of your highlighting, you have to enter the terms in the Terms field text box to save the new highlight set. You also have the option of applying color-coding to these terms in the Viewer.

6.3.1 Color-coding persistent highlights

When you enter a term in the Highlight Terms box, you can also specify the color for both the text and the background. Use the following format to color-code your persistently highlighted text:

[background color];[text color];[term to be highlighted]

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For example, enter “3;16;Relativity” to highlight Relativity with dark green background and white text. The following table includes available color codes.

Color name Color Number

[Default] 0

Black 1

Dark red

Dark green

Dark yellow

Dark blue

Dark magenta

2

3

4

5

6

Dark cyan

Light gray

Gray

Red

Green

Yellow

Blue

Magenta

Cyan

White

10

11

12

13

14

7

8

9

15

16

If you enter terms with no color-coding, the background defaults to magenta and black text.

Note: Default has different implications for text and background. The default background color is white and the default text color is black.

6.3.2 Guidelines for adding terms or phrases

Use the following guidelines when adding terms or phrases: n n

Enter a term that you want highlighted and press Enter. You can enter multiple terms but each one must be on a separate line.

Enter terms for persistent highlighting exactly as they appear in the document. Don't use quotation marks and connectors.

Note: Quotation marks are not compatible with persistent highlighting, which automatically searches for an exact phrase. Using quotation marks results in slower document loading speeds.

n

Keep lists simple. Do not use punctuation, special characters, operators, or dtSearch syntax.

o

AND or OR operators are not used in keyword searching. If used, Relativity looks for the exact phrase including “AND” or “OR”. For example, you entered these search terms: Apple AND

Banana. Relativity highlights the entire phrase “apple and banana” in the document. Separate occurrences of apple, and occurrences of banana, are not highlighted.

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o

Persistent highlight set terms do support wildcards. You can view highlighted terms that contain an * (asterisk) character, including a wildcard in the middle of a term. For example:

Note: Wildcards in persistent highlight terms do not respect special characters for highlighting in the

HTML5 viewer. For instance, if a term contains test* then only the word test highlights.

n n n n l l l

term* matches and highlights any word that starts with "term" with zero or more following characters.

*term matches and highlights any word that ends with "term" with zero or more preceding characters.

*term* matches and highlights any word that has "term" in it with zero or more preceding or following characters.

Do not enter duplicate terms.

Identify and remove terms with large hit counts.

List variations of a term first and enter the root term last.

If the list of terms is large (>100 terms), use Highlight Fields with a Search Terms Report.

6.4 Using the highlight fields source

Using the Highlight Fields source in a persistent highlight set you can choose a field referencing a list of terms to highlight.

Select the Highlight Fields source, and then click the to open the field picker on Persistent

Highlight Sets system view. This system view displays the Name and Object Type for applicable multiple object fields, including those created by Search Terms Reports.

Note: Persistent highlights generated by a Search Terms Report don't automatically update after you load new data into a workspace. You must rebuild the dtSearch index to incorporate the text from new documents.

In the following example, the picker view shows all completed Search Terms Reports in the workspace of the Report and Tag type. To select a Highlight Field, check the field’s box, click Add followed by Set. The field appears on the layout.

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When using a Search Terms Report as the highlight fields source, the number of terms that

Relativity searches for will vary among different records. Relativity only looks for the terms listed in the Search Terms Report for that document.

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6.4.1 Best practices

Consider the following guidelines when creating or adding terms using Search Terms Reports as the highlight fields source: n n n n n

Enter terms exactly as they appear in the document.

Do not use operators such as AND and OR. Operators including “AND” or “OR,” are not used in keyword searching. If used, Relativity looks for the exact phrase including “AND” or “OR.” For example, if you entered these search terms: Apple AND Banana, Relativity would highlight the entire phrase

“apple and banana” in the document. Separate occurrences of apple, and occurrences of banana do

NOT receive highlighting.

Wildcards are useful in some cases. For example, the search term appl* highlights apple, application, applies, and so on. An excessive use of wildcards affects performance. Leading wildcards such as *itting, are not recommended. Using asterisks in the middle of a term don't count as wildcards.

Avoid using advanced dtSearch functionality, including proximity, stemming, and fuzziness.

o

Persistent highlighting does not understand proximity searching. If you enter the phrase “Relativity w/5 software” as a search term, the search term report uses a dtSearch to find and tag all documents that meet those criteria. However, persistent highlighting functions differently than dtSearch. Persistent highlighting looks for the term Relativity, a space, the letter w, any special o character (instead of “/”), the number 5, a space, and then the term software.

Persistent highlighting does not understand the stemming character (~). If you enter the term

“apply~” as a search term, the search term report finds and tags all documents with the word apply, or any document that stems from apply; including applied, applies, application, and so on. However, persistent highlighting looks for the term “apply” followed by any special character, so you will not see the expected terms highlighted.

In Search Terms Reports, you can work around these limitations by using the Dictionary Search function to identify search terms using stemming or fuzziness. Copy the list of terms returned in this search.

Paste them in the Add Terms box on the Search Terms Report form. Doing this enhances your search

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term list, while avoiding errors caused by special characters.

6.5 Importing search terms for persistent highlighting

To import search terms to use as a source for persistent highlighting perform the following procedures.

6.5.1 Relativity component setup

Before importing search terms, use the following steps to create a Relativity Dynamic Object to handle the data.

1. Navigate to the Object Type tab in your workspace.

2. Click New Object Type.

a. Provide a name for the new object in the required Name property.

b. Keep all remaining properties at their default values.

c. Click Save.

3. Navigate to the Fields tab.

4. Click New Field to create the field that to hold the persistent highlight color information. This field also connects your Dynamic Object to the Document object.

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5. In the New Field form, specify the following properties: a. Object Type- <Dynamic Object created in step 2> b. Name- Highlight Colors c. Field Type- Fixed-Length Text d. Length- 10 e. Keep all remaining properties at their default values.

f. Click Save and New.

6. Create a new field to link your Dynamic Object and the Document object. Specify the following properties: a. Object Type- Document b. Name- <User preference> c. Field Type- Multiple Object d. Associative Object Type- <Dynamic Object created in step 2> e. Keep all remaining properties at their default values.

f. Click Save.

7. Navigate to the Persistent Highlight Sets tab in your workspace.

8. Click New Persistent Highlight Set.

9. Create a new set with the following properties: a. Name- <User preference> b. Order- <User preference>; this controls the position of this set in the Persistent Highlight Tree in the Viewer.

c. Source- Highlight Fields d. Highlight Fields- <The name of the field created in step 6b.> e. Click Save.

6.5.2 Importing terms

To import a CSV or other Relativity-supported load file containing terms, use the following procedure.

1. Open the Relativity Desktop Client.

2. Select the workspace you are importing into.

3. Select the Dynamic Object you created above from the object drop-down menu.

4. Select Tools from the top menu.

5. Select Import | <Dynamic Object> load file.

6. Select your terms load file and corresponding delimiters.

7. Map the field in your load file that contains the terms to the Name field in Relativity.

Here you can also import Relativity Highlight Color. You must have this information in the load file contained in a field in the following format: text color; highlight color (for example, 15;9). If you do not have this information in the load file, you can manually enter it for terms in Relativity. Because the latter can be time consuming, we recommend having this information in the load file if possible.

8. Click Import to import the terms.

9. Navigate to the object tab you created in step two of the Relativity component setup section.

10. Click on a term.

11. Select the layout you want to use from the drop-down menu.

12. Click the pencil icon to edit the layout.

13. Click Add Associative Object list.

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14. Use the drop-down menu to select the field you created in 6b of the Relativity component setup section.

15. Set the View field to your preferred document view.

16. Set the Link View field to your preferred document view.

17. Click Save.

18. Click Link.

19. Select all documents.

20. Click Add.

21. Click Set.

22. Repeat steps 10 through 22 on each term.

23. Verify that the terms are highlight through the following: a. Open a document in the workspace.

b. Open the Persistent Highlight Tree in the Viewer.

c. Note the presence of the newly created Persistent Highlight Set and verify that terms are highlight in the appropriate colors.

6.6 Creating efficient searches for persistent highlighting

Creating efficient searches improves the performance of persistent highlighting, whether you're working with a Terms Search or Highlight Fields. Use the following guidelines to create efficient searches.

Avoid the following when writing searches for persistent highlighting: n n n n n n

Do not use "AND" or "OR" connectors. Persistent highlighting looks for the exact phrase "trade and complete" instead of the word "trade" and the word "complete."

Do not use proximity, fuzziness, and stemming search logic. The system ignores the dtSearch syntax.

Terms receive no highlight if you use these advanced searching features. The search terms report

Count column still lists the number of matching terms. For example: o o

The search term “oil w/10 water” searches for the exact phrase oil w/10 water.

If you enter the term “apply~” as a search term, persistent highlighting technology looks for the term apply followed by any special character.

Avoid using terms with a large number of hits per document. Persistent highlighting highlights each hit.

For example, it takes longer to load a Word document containing 1,000 instances of a single term.

Avoid using terms that only occur once in a document. Use search terms reports for those terms instead.

Avoid long lists of numbers, such as Bates numbers or account numbers.

Do not use duplicate terms.

Use the following techniques to optimize your searches: n

Use the dtSearch Dictionary to identify variations of a term instead of using wildcards.

o o

Identify which terms should be in the highlight set and which terms are not necessary.

You may want to avoid highlighting terms with high word counts.

Note: To highlight terms using objects, create a fixed-length text field for your object called Relativity

Highlight Color. You can enter color-coding in this field using the format:

[highlight color];[text color].

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7 Search terms reports

Search terms reports provide the ability to identify documents containing specific keywords or terms

. You can enter multiple terms and generate a report listing the number of hits for each term in a document. You can determine the output of the report by selecting one of the following type options: n n

Report Only - Creates a report that includes the number of hits for each term or phrase. (A hit indicates one or more uses of the term or phrase in a document.)

Report and Tag - Creates a report that includes the number of hits for each term or phrase in addition to the following: o o

Creates a multiple object field named after the search term report with the prefix STR.

Tags the documents using the multiple object field with the search term(s) found.

You can also use the reports created with the report and tag option in your markup sets. When you select a search terms report for use with a markup set, the report determines which terms or phrases to highlight in the documents through the core reviewer interface.

Also see this related recipe: n

Searching for a document set using control numbers

Using search terms reports

You’re a system admin at a law firm and one of your clients, a construction company, is involved in litigation regarding the use of materials that they weren’t informed were potentially environmentally damaging when they purchased them from a major supplier.

There are roughly three million files related to this case, including emails, email attachments, invoices, and technical manuals related to construction practices and material handling.

Before you begin review, you want a report that tells you how many times the names of toxic substances appear in the documents. To get this, you create a new search terms report. You give it a name congruent with a number of the other objects you've created for this case, "Hazardous

Materials search terms report." For the Index field, you select the dtSearch index you already created for your reviewers. Since you don't need to actually tag the documents that contain the terms you want to include, you select the Report Only option for the Type field. For the Searchable

Set field, you select the set of documents you specified when you created the saved search for the dtSearch index data source. Finally, in the Add Terms field, you enter the substances you want reported on, which are the same ones included in your client's lawsuit and the same ones for which you've already created choices for an issue coding field. These terms are: n n n n lead asbestos asphalt radioactive isotopes

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You save and run the report. The results tell you how prevalent these terms are syntactically represented in the data set. You now have a better idea of what lies ahead.

7.1 Guidelines for using search terms reports

Use the following guidelines to ensure that your search terms report properly highlights the required terms: n n n n

Define a saved search using conditions that return the required group of documents for the Searchable

Set. Persistent highlighting applies only to documents in the searchable set. If you include a relational group, Relativity only counts the related items in the searchable set.

Confirm that the dtSearch you're using for the search terms report indexed all the documents in the

Searchable Set.

Select Report and Tag in the Type radio button list for the report. If you don't select this option, then a multiple object field isn't created for the search terms report. If this field isn't created you can't select it in the Highlight Fields option when creating a persistent highlights set. See

Persistent highlight sets on page 45

.

When you use search terms reports for persistent highlights, only the terms in documents associated with the current reports appear highlighted. If you add new search terms to the reports, you must run pending terms so that they appear highlighted in documents.

7.2 Creating a search terms report

To create a new search terms report, follow these steps:

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1. Navigate to the Reporting tab.

The Search Terms Reports tab opens by default.

2. Click New Search Terms Report.

3. Complete the fields on the form. See

Fields below .

4. Click Save.

After saving the search terms report, the Search Terms Report Status section and Search Terms

Report console appear. As the status section indicates, you must add terms to your new report. See

Adding or editing terms and highlight colors on the next page

.

7.2.1 Fields

Search terms reports contain the following fields: n n

Name - the search terms report’s name. This value can't exceed 75 characters.

Index - the index used to create the report. You can select either a dtSearch index or a Lucene Search index.

Note: If you're using Data Grid in your workspace, we recommend using a Lucene Search index. Relativity

9.4.378.21 includes significant improvements when running a search terms report on a Lucene index. In order to use this optimized search, you must upgrade to Data Grid 2.3.3.58. For more information, contact Client

Services .

n n n

Searchable set - a saved search that includes the set of documents used to create the report.

Type - select one of the following options: o

Report and tag - creates a report that includes the number of hits for each term or phrase in addition to the following: o l l

Creates a multiple object field named after the search term report with the prefix STR, i.e.

STR - Industry terms.

Tags each document containing search hits using the STR multiple object field with the search term(s) found in each document.

Report only - creates a report that includes the number of hits for each term or phrase.

Calculate unique hits - if set to Yes, this setting includes a Unique hits value for each term in the search terms results. Unique hits is the count of documents in the searchable set returned by only that particular term. If more than one term returns a particular document, that document is not counted as a unique hit. Unique hits reflect the total number of documents returned by a particular term and only that particular term.

Note: Unique hits can help you identify terms in your search terms report that may be overly inclusive.

n

Include relational group - includes the "Documents with hits, including group" counts for each term in the search terms results. This value counts the documents with hits for each term as well as all documents in the same relational group as the documents with hits. Include relational group only includes hits of related items in the searchable set. Relativity doesn't look outside of the searchable set. Click the ellipsis and select a relational group to include.

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7.2.2 Adding or editing terms and highlight colors

To add or edit terms for your search terms report:

Note: You must create a Persistent highlight set for highlighted terms to appear in your documents. See

Persistent highlight sets

for more information.

1. Click the name of your Search terms report.

2. Click Modify Terms from the Search Terms Report console.

The Search Terms report window opens.

3. Enter your terms in the text box under the New Terms heading so that each term appears on a separate line.

Alternatively, you can also click the Dictionary link to display the Dictionary Search pop-up. In the popup you can perform searches using fuzziness, proximity, and stemming. Click Copy to List to add the

Dictionary search results to the New Terms text box.

Note: Each line is treated as an individual dtSearch query. For more information about dtSearch, refer to the

Searching Guide .

4. Click Add Terms to move your new terms to the existing terms list.

A single term has a character limit of 450. A confirmation message displays with the count of new terms added and duplicate terms ignored.

5. (Optional) Select the checkbox next to the term(s) and select the background color and text color using the drop-down menus. See the preview text to verify that the resulting highlighted text is readable.

Click Apply Color.

Note: By default, highlighted terms appear as black text with a magenta background.

6. Click Done.

After adding new search terms to an existing report, you must run the terms so that they appear highlighted in documents. See

Running a search terms report on page 65

for details.

7.2.3 Using check syntax

You can check the syntax of your Lucene Search terms before adding them to your search terms report. This option is only available if you select Lucene Search as your search index. Click Lucene

Syntax Help for documentation on Lucene Search.

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To check the syntax of your terms:

1. If the syntax checker is disabled, select the checkbox next to Check for dtSearch Syntax.

Note: Changing the checkbox setting updates the default property for the logged in user.

2. Enter your terms in the New Terms text box, and then click Add Terms.

Relativity checks for any dtSearch syntax that is not compatible with Lucene Search (such as

"apple w/5 pear"). Compatible terms move to the Existing Terms list, while incompatible terms remain in the New Terms text box.

3. Select one of the following options for the terms that remain in the New Terms text box: n n

Add Anyway - ignores the syntax errors that exist in your search terms and adds the terms to the Existing Terms list.

Edit Remaining Terms - closes the syntax warning and returns you to the terms management layout without adding the terms to the Existing Terms list.

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For more information on Lucene Search syntax, see the Searching Guide.

7.2.4 Deleting terms

To remove terms from the search terms report:

1. Click Modify Terms.

2. Select the checkbox next to the term(s) you want to remove under Existing Terms.

3. Click Delete.

4. Click Done.

If you remove search terms from the reports, the terms automatically disappear from the search terms report results. You must run the report again for accurate totals in the status bar and when using View Term Report.

7.3 Running a search terms report

You generate a search terms report by using the options available in the search terms report console. The console appears after you save a search terms report or when you open an existing report from the Search Terms Report tab.

The console includes the following options:

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n n n n

Modify Terms - opens the terms management screen. On this screen, you can add new terms to the report, apply text and background highlight colors, and delete existing terms from the report.

Run All Terms - generates counts for each term. Use this option when generating the report for the first time or if you want to regenerate counts for all terms in the report. Run all terms after adding new documents to the searchable set.

Run Pending Terms - updates an existing report. It runs a report on only those terms with a Pending status.

View Results - opens the Search Terms Results page. This page displays the report results, listing the number of document hits for each term. Navigate back to the search terms report console for the report you are viewing by clicking on the object name in the search panel filter card.

The Search Terms Results page provides the following: o o

Name - search term included in search terms report.

Documents with hits - the number of documents in the searchable set that contain the search term.

Note: Documents with hits is not security-aware or influenced by permissions. This means that it includes documents the user can't view in a basic search. For example, a user could perform a dtSearch that returns a total of five documents, including two inaccessible documents. Even though the user can only view three documents, the search terms count still includes all five documents originally tagged with the search term.

o

Documents with hits, including group - counts the documents with hits for each term as well as all documents in the same relational group as the documents with hits. The count only includes hits of related items in the searchable set. It will not look outside of the searchable set.

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n n n o o

Unique hits - counts the number of documents in the searchable set returned by only that particular term. If more than one term returns a particular document, that document is not counted as a unique hit. Unique hits reflect the total number of documents returned by a particular term and only that particular term.

Last run time - timestamp when the search terms report last ran.

o

In this page, you can also access a list of any terms that failed during the creation of the Search

Terms Report. To read these error messages, change your view to Search Terms Results Details.

View Term Report - In the Search Terms Report console, click View Term Report to open the graphical search terms report. You can print or save the report. To save, select a file type at the top of the report.

Retry Errors - attempts to regenerate the report for search terms that returned error messages.

Refresh Page - updates the information displayed on the page.

7.3.1 Search terms report status

After running a search terms report, the search terms report status section appears. It lists the search terms report name and status. The status indicates the current progress of the report. This field contains either Searching your terms, Completed, or Error.

This section also provides a summary of the search terms report and its results: n n n n

Number of terms - total number of terms run in the search terms report.

Documents in searchable set - total documents in the designated searchable set.

Total documents with hits - the number of documents in the searchable set that contain the search term.

Total documents with hits, including <relational group name> - counts the documents with hits for each term as well as all documents in the same relational group as the documents with hits.

7.4 Accessing tagged documents using the Field Tree browser

After you run a search term report with the Report and Tag option enabled, Relativity creates a folder in the Field Tree browser with documents grouped by tags found by the search term report.

The folder is named after the STR multiple object field created by the search term report.

Click a search term tag in the Field Tree browser to view documents in your searchable set tagged with the selected term. You can also email a link to the tagged documents by right-clicking the tag results and selecting Email Link.

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7.5 Using tagged search terms in a saved search

After you run a search term report with the Report and Tag option enabled, Relativity creates choices for each of the terms that you specified. You can then use these choices as criteria in a saved search.

Use this procedure to create a saved search using tagged search terms:

1. Follow the instructions for setting fields in the Information and Search Conditions sections on a saved search.

2. Select your search term report in the Field box and select a condition in the Operator box in the Conditions section.

3. Click to display the Select STR dialog in the Value field.

4. Perform the following tasks on the Select STR dialog: a. Select your search term report in the Field box.

b. Select an Operator, such as any of these.

c. Click to select search terms on the Select Items dialog.

Note: When using the “any of these” operator, each search term must be entered on separate condition lines to return the correct results (shown below). When using the “all of these” operator, each term must be entered on a single condition line to return the correct results.

d. Set any other fields as necessary.

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5. Click OK. If you added the tagged search terms called energy, oil, and enron, the Conditions section would appear as follows:

6. Repeat steps 1 to 3 for each tagged search terms.

7. Click Search to run your query.

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8 Searching overview

Relativity includes flexible search features designed to facilitate the document review process.

These easily accessible features support a range of searching needs from filtering on fields and simple keyword searches to the development of complex queries. The following list summarizes the searching features available in Relativity.

Filters

You can use filters to limit the documents or items that appear in item lists on Relativity tabs and pop-ups. When you enable the filters for an item list, you can set criteria on single or multiple fields so that only matching documents or items appear in the view. Filters query across the searchable set of documents in the active view to return your results. Relativity supports multiple filter types so that you can easily choose the best format for different field types. See the Searching Guide for more information.

Keyword searches

You can run keyword searches from the Documents tab and from Dynamic Object tabs. With these searches, you can leverage the basic functionality for querying the SQL full-text index populated with data from extracted text fields. The keyword search engine supports the use of Boolean operators and wildcards. As the default search engine in Relativity, keyword search automatically populates with extracted text during data import. See the Searching Guide for more information.

Saved searches

These searches provide you with the functionality to define and store queries for repeated use. With flexible settings, you can create a saved search based on any Relativity search engine, assign security permissions to it, and define specific columns to display your search results. Saved searches support the development of complex queries that you build using a form with search condition options. These queries run dynamically to ensure that updated results appear when you access a saved search. See the Searching Guide for more information.

dtSearches

Available on the Documents tab, you can use the advanced searching functionality to run queries with proximity, stemming, and fuzziness operators, as well as with basic features such as Boolean operators and wildcards. System admins can create a dtSearch index for a specific subset of documents in a workspace, and then assign security to it. They must manually update indexes when the document search sets used to create them are modified. See the Searching Guide for more information.

Lucene Search

The Lucene Search option provides you with a way to search on long text fields stored in Data Grid for any Data Grid-enabled workspaces in your Relativity environment. Once you enable it, Lucene

Search is available in the search drop-down, along with your Keyword Search, dtSearch, and

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Analytics indexes. The Lucene Search includes single-term search, exact phrase search, wildcards, fuzziness, proximity, Boolean operators, and grouping. See the Relativity Data Grid guide.

Analytics

Supporting conceptual searching, Analytics includes documents in a result set when they contain similar ideas or conceptual relationships, rather than matching specific search terms or conditions.

You can create searches with Analytics that categorize your documents based on the concepts contained in a sample document set. Instead of categorizing documents, you can also perform clustering, which uses specific algorithms (system-defined rules) to identify conceptually related documents. See the Searching Guide for more information.

Regular expressions

Regular Expressions (RegEx) is a form of advanced searching that looks for specific patterns, as opposed to certain terms and phrases. With RegEx you can use pattern matching to search for particular strings of characters rather than constructing multiple, literal search queries. You can use

RegEx with a dtSearch index using dtSearch syntax options to construct complex queries.See the

Searching Guide for more information.

Additional features

Relativity provides additional features that make searching easily accessible from the Documents tab. With the search condition option, you can build queries using the same condition options available for saved searches. You can click Save as Search on the Documents tab to create saved searches based on the criteria defined for keyword searches, dtSearches, Analytics, or the search conditions option. See the Searching Guide for more information.

8.1 Search conditions

You can use the search conditions option to build complex queries by selecting fields, operators, and values. While this feature has the same functionality as the search condition section of the saved search form, it's conveniently available from the Documents tab and Relativity Dynamic Object tabs.

This option displays up to five rows, with each row representing a separate criterion. Depending on the type of field you select, different operators appear. You can use this option alone or in conjunction with keyword searches, dtSearches, Analytics, or Cluster visualization. When you use search options in conjunction with another search feature, documents must both meet the search criteria and also the conditions specified.

Note: To use the search conditions option, you must have add or edit permissions for Search and access to the

Saved Searches Browser assigned to you through the Security page. See Workspace security in the

Admin Guide.

8.1.1 Setting up search conditions

8.1.1.1 Setting up search conditions in the Search panel

To set up search conditions in the Search panel follow these steps:

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1. Navigate to the Search Builder.

2. Click Add Condition and select the fields to which you want to apply conditions.

A pop-up window opens for each condition field you select.

3. Set the required conditions in the relevant field pop-up window.

4. Click Apply.

5. (Optional)Click Add Logic Group to add a logic group. Logic groups are evaluated first, and then connected to other filter conditions or logic groups using AND / OR operators.

6. (Optional) Drag and drop conditions together to create logic groups.

7. (Optional) Add the AND or OR operators to connect the criterion.

8. Click Apply.

If you need to edit the condition, click on the condition card. The pop-up reopens so you can make changes.

8.1.1.2 Setting up search conditions in the Search browser

To set up search conditions in the Search browser, follow these steps:

1. Click to navigate to the Search Browser.

2. Click New Search.

3. Click Add Condition and select the fields to which you want to apply conditions.

A pop-up window opens for each condition field you select.

4. Set the required conditions in the relevant field pop-up window.

5. Click Apply.

6. (Optional) Click Add Logic Group to add a logic group and drag and drop your conditions into the frames. Logic groups are evaluated first and then connected to other filter conditions or logic groups using AND / OR operators.

7. (Optional) Add the AND or OR operators to connect the criterion.

8. Enter all required fields.

9. Click Save or Save As.

If you need to edit the condition, click on the condition card. The pop-up reopens so you can make changes.

8.1.1.3 Using the multiple object condition builder

You can set conditions for multiple object fields from a single pop-up window. The following example uses Batch as a multiple object field condition.

To use the multi-object condition builder, follow these steps:

1. Click Add Condition from the Search browser or Search panel.

2. Enter or select Batch.

The Condition: Batch window opens.

3. Select the desired operator from the Operator drop-down. For example, these conditions.

4. Click Add Condition.

5. Select the condition from the Add Condition drop-down. For example, Batch:: Batch Set.

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6. Click the available fields from the Available column and move them to the Selected column as desired.

7. Click Apply.

8. (Optional) Click Add Logic Group to add a logic group. Logic groups are evaluated first and then connected to other filter conditions or logic groups using AND / OR operators.

9. (Optional) Drag and drop conditions into logic groups as desired.

10. Click Apply on the Condition: Batch window.

Relativity applies your search conditions.

8.1.2 Canceling queries

You can cancel a long-running search or view by clicking the Cancel button in the new UI framework or Cancel Request link in the legacy UI. This link appears when you perform a keyword search, dtSearch, Analytics search, or use Pivot. It also appears when you filter or sort a document or

Dynamic Object list. It also appears when you perform other actions on item lists containing documents or Dynamic Objects that initiate a query in the background.

When you click Cancel Request, Relativity stops the background query used to populate documents in an item list. If you edit a search and click this link, your changes save, but the item list doesn't load. For example, your changes save when you perform a mass edit on a list of documents in a search and then click Cancel Request when the query is running to redisplay the updated list.

Note: Relativity creates an audit record in the History tab for canceled queries. The query description displays the running time of the query and indicates that it was canceled. You must have the appropriate permissions to view this tab.

The following table explains different scenarios in which you might cancel a running query and whether the query actually cancels.

Scenario Result

You start a query and click Cancel Request or Cancel. The query is canceled.

You start a query and close the browser.

You start a query and an system admin resets the IIS on the server.

The query is canceled.

The query is not canceled.

You start a query and leave your browser idle for longer than the session timeout specified in Relativity web.config, regardless of whether you clicked OK or

Cancel on the message from the webpage pop-up.

You start a query and click Cancel on the message from the webpage pop-up within the session timeout specified in Relativity web.config.

You start a query and click OK on the message from webpage pop-up within the session timeout specified in Relativity web.config.

You start a query and paste a different URL into your browser, or you refresh the page.

The query is not canceled.

The query is canceled.

The query continues to run. Relativity returns you back to the waiting screen (see the first row of this table).

The query is canceled.

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8.1.3 Frequently asked searching questions

This section includes frequently asked questions from Relativity users.

8.1.3.1 Multiple Terms

Why would I receive an error message saying my query is too complex?

Relativity can't return precise results when a query includes search conditions that are too complex due to the use of multiple search terms. To avoid this error message, simplify your search criteria.

For example, search for 10 instead of 50 terms in your query. You can save and tag your search results from each simpler query. With this approach you can search on the required terms, while providing better results.

8.1.3.2 Proximity Searches

Why are terms in my proximity search highlighted even when they don't match my defined

W/N criteria?

Relativity highlights terms that meet the requirements of your proximity search as well as the individual search terms. This behavior doesn't affect the results of your proximity search, which returns the appropriate documents. For example, the results of a proximity search for instances of law within three words of order (that is "law W/3 order") includes highlighted terms of "law" and

"order" when they aren't within three words of each other. To accommodate this behavior, focus only on the results that match the proximity search criteria, and disregard the other highlighted terms.

8.1.3.3 Using ampersands

Can I use an ampersand (&) in my search queries?

Overall, searching with the & character is unpredictable and gives inconsistent search results.

Although the & character is in the search index as a space character it's also reserved as an operator in dtSearch and can skew expected search results. In order to get the most accurate results when searching with the & character, use proximity searching instead. Searching with the

& character as a dtSearch operator returns search results as expected.

8.1.3.4 Multiple Conditions

Why do my searches run slowly when I use multiple conditions?

When you add multiple search conditions to a query, Relativity searches on these conditions relative to each other, which slows down the return of your results. For example, you experience slow performance when running a query on all email messages received "after June 1" and "before June

30" of the same year. You can improve performance by using as few conditions as possible, such as excluding the condition "before June 30". Run the query with only the condition "after June 1", and then sort or filter your results to display messages received between the desired dates.

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8.1.3.5 Nesting Searches

Can I nest multiple searches in a saved search?

For performance reasons, we don't recommend nesting multiple searches in a saved search. You can select a search as a condition, but using multiple searches as conditions slows down the return of your results. See the Searching guide for more information.

9 Summary reports

Summary reports provide aggregate tallies of field values. Field types available for reporting are limited to the following: n n n n

Multiple-choice list

Single-choice list

User

Yes/No

The reports are based on an optional grouping criterion (the vertical axis) and the fields to be tallied

(the horizontal axis).

For example, you can create a summary report with the grouping criterion custodian, where the field to be tallied is responsiveness. The report shows the number of documents that have been tagged with each responsiveness value per custodian.

Using summary reports

Imagine you're a system admin, and the review manager for your firm requests metrics on the job performances of reviewers. You want to be able to track the effectiveness of each reviewer by retrieving information about how many documents he or she reviews per day along with how many they code as responsive, not responsive, or unsure.

You create a summary report that lists the number of documents reviewed by the reviewers and export the report to excel to pass on to the manager.

9.1 Creating and editing a summary report

To create a summary report, follow these steps:

1. Click the Summary Reports tab.

2. Click New Summary Report, or if you're editing an existing summary report, click Edit.

3. Complete the fields on the form. See

Fields on the next page .

4. Click Save.

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9.2 Fields

n n n

Folders - located in the browser to the left of the form. You can specify the scope of the report using folders. You can report on the entire case workspace or only on specific folders and subfolders.

Name - the title of the summary report.

Group By - an optional field where you can select a grouping criterion for the report. Grouping criteria appear as rows on the report.

o

Leave the group by field blank to display only a summary with no grouping.

o

Click to select your grouping condition.

Note: You can use filters to quickly find your field.

n

Report on subfolders - a yes/no field that reports on a single folder or a folder and its subfolders.

Defaults to Yes, which reports on folders and their subfolders.

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n

Columns - select which fields are tallied. Selected fields display as columns on the report.

o o

Add Columns - add columns to the report. Click Add Columns and select the checkbox for each field you want to tally. You can use filters to quickly find the desired fields. Only multi-choice list, single-choice list, user, and yes/no fields can be reported on.

Remove selected columns - remove fields from your columns section.

10 Tabs

A workspace contains tabs that provide you with easy access to different Relativity features, including documents, search terms reports, views, and other default functionality. Relativity is a highly customizable platform. You can apply any template with a tabs arrangement that best serves your review needs. Some workspace templates also include custom tabs for specialized functionality.

You can add custom tabs in workspaces or at Home. Users with admin rights also have access to a

Tabs tab from Home. The functionality of this Tabs tab is the same as the Tabs tab in a workspace.

In addition, Relativity automatically creates a tab when you add a new object type. If you are developing a custom application, you may want to obtain the globally unique identifier (GUID) for a tab. For information about obtaining GUIDs, see Basic concepts for the application framework on the Relativity 9.5 Developers site.

Using tabs

You're a system admin facilitating a document review project involving thousands of patients whose private personal health information was stolen during a security breach.

You're in the process of creating an application for tracking the many attorneys associated with this litigation. You want to add to this application a list of all the law firms where these attorneys work to go along with the master list of attorney names you've already created.

To do this, you want to create a new tab to hold the names of these law firms. You go to the Tabs tab and create a new tab with a name of Law Firms and an order of 10. You keep the Link Type field at its default value of Object. For the Object Type field, you select the Law Firm , which you just created as one of the several objects that will make up the application you're creating.

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Once you save the Law Firms tab, you can now populate it with the names of firms that employ the many attorneys involved in your case.

10.1 Creating and editing tabs

To create or edit a tab, follow these steps:

1. Click the Tabs tab.

2. Click New Tab. If you're editing an existing tab, click Edit.

3. Complete the fields on the form. See

Fields on the next page .

4. Click Save.

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10.2 Fields

n n

Name - the tab’s name. This field must be between 1 and 50 characters. Be as concise as possible when naming tabs.

Order - represents the position of the tab by a numerical value. It can be any positive or negative integer. You cannot use decimals in this field. The lowest-numbered tab is the leftmost tab. The highest-numbered tab is the rightmost tab. Items that share the same value are sorted in alphanumeric order.

Note: It’s always a good idea to set tab order by 10's, starting with 10, then 20, then 30, etc. By numbering in groups of 10 you can insert an item into any position later in the workspace, without the need to reorder (for example, you can use 10, 20, 25, 30, 40 to insert a new tab between 20 and

30).

n n

View Order - displays a list of active tabs and their current order when you click View Order.

Link Type - determines the type of tab you want to create: o o

Object - creates a tab for a non-document object in your workspace.

External - link to any URL or object type in Relativity.

Note: Selecting External from the Link Type menu causes the Link field to appear below the Parent field. In the Link field, you can enter a web address to link to a URL.

You can create a link from a tab to an Relativity Dynamic Object (RDO) or a script, using either an

Artifact ID or GUID. To create links to other objects, you must use their GUIDs. For information

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about working with objects that don't have GUIDs, see

Assigning a GUID to an object on the next page .

Use the following token to link to an object: ObjectArtifactIdentifier=[identifier], where

[identifier] is the GUID of the object, or in the case of RDOs and scripts, the GUID or Artifact ID.

For example, you would use the format ObjectArtifactIdentifier=736b1c1f-d22f-43cf-9094-

cc8acf94c60 to create a link from a tab to the object with this GUID.

Use the following text replacement options to customize the URL, allowing you to display current details about your workspace:

Text Replacement Option

%ApplicationPath%

%AppID%

%AuthenticationToken%

%artifactTypeid%

%parentArtifactID%

%associatedartifactid%

%connectorfieldartifactid%

Replacement Text

The actual application path

AppID=<Current Workspace ID>

AuthenticationToken=<New Authentication Token>

ArtifactTypeID=<Current ArtifactTypeID>

ParentArtifactID=<Current Parent ArtifactID>

AssociatedArtifactID=<Current Instance Artifact ID>

ConnectorFieldArtifactID=<Current Connector Field Artifact

ID> n n n n n o

Parent - establishes the tab as a parent tab. Existing tabs can then be set as children of the parent tab, thereby creating a drop-down tab structure. Selecting this changes the layout by hiding the Parent, Object Type, and Is Default fields and bringing up the required Tab Display field.

Parent - the tab is placed as a child tab in the drop-down list of any parent tab.

Object Type - determines which object’s information is displayed in the tab for those specified as Link

Type = Object.

Is Default - the tab to serves as the workspace’s default tab. Reviewers logging in to the workspace are taken to the default tab. If a reviewer does not have access to the default tab, he or she is directed to the Documents tab.

Is Visible- select this tab from the tab menu.

Relativity Applications - add this tab to a Relativity application. Clicking applications.

brings up a list of available

10.3 Nesting tabs

You may prefer to nest several tabs within a parent to reduce clutter in your Relativity interface and make tabs easier to locate. You must first specify a tab as a parent (step 1) and then specify children tabs (steps 2-4).

1. Create a new tab with a Link Type of Parent or edit an existing tab.

2. Click the Edit link next to the tab you want to nest.

3. Choose the parent tab name under the Parent drop-down menu.

4. Click Save.

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Repeat for each tab you wish to nest. Nested tabs reside in the drop-down menu of the parent. The tab disappears from the tab strip and reside below the new tab.

10.4 Assigning a GUID to an object

You need to assign a GUID to a Relativity object that only has an Artifact ID, before you can link a tab to it. To assign a GUID to an object, you run a SQL script on database for the workspace where the object resides. This script adds this identifier to the record for the object on the Artifact.Guid

table in the database.

You need to complete this assignment process for all Relativity objects except for the following cases: n n

RDOs and scripts - you can link these objects to tabs using their Artifact IDs or GUIDs, if available. See

Creating and editing tabs on page 78

.

Objects in applications - Relativity automatically assigns GUIDs to objects added to applications. For information about obtaining their GUIDs, see Viewing component GUIDs on the Relativity 9.5

Developers site.For information about obtaining their GUIDs, see Viewing component GUIDs on the

Relativity 9.5 Developers site.

Use the following procedure to assign a GUID to an object:

1. Obtain the Artifact ID for an object from the URL used to access it, or by adding the Artifact ID field to the list view for the object in Relativity.

2. Log in to your database server. You must be a database admin.

3. Locate the workspace database for the object that requires a GUID.

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4. Execute the following SQL script on the workspace database for the object:

DECLARE @artifactID int = 0 -- Your artifact that is missing a GUID.

IF NOT EXISTS (SELECT 1 FROM EDDSDBO.[ArtifactGuid] WHERE ArtifactID

= @artifactID)

BEGIN

INSERT INTO EDDSDBO.[ArtifactGuid] VALUES (@artifactID, NEWID())

END

SELECT [ArtifactGuid] FROM EDDSDBO.[ArtifactGuid] WHERE ArtifactID =

@artifactID

5. Assign the GUID added to the database to the ObjectArtifactIdentifier token to link a tab to the object.

See

Creating and editing tabs on page 78

.

11 Transcripts

ASCII transcripts are a type of document you can load into Relativity and review. When you work with transcripts in Relativity, you can use the following unique features: creating word indexes of terms in a transcript, linking to related documents in a workspace from within a transcript, and inline tagging to add identifiable reference terms to specific content in a transcript. When processing transcripts, you also have the option to add or remove header and footer content to and from your transcripts.

Note: Relativity accepts only ASCII transcripts.

Note: You can perform native redactions on transcripts that appear when you perform basic imaging on a transcript; however, native redactions on transcripts are not respected if you use native imaging to image a transcript.

Note: You can't print highlights and redactions on a native transcript in the HTML viewer. In order to do this, you must revert to the ActiveX viewer.

Using transcripts

You're an attorney and have a copy of the deposition from the defendant in the form of a transcript. Some of the statements made during the deposition conflict with statements made in certain emails sent by the defendant.

You load the transcript into Relativity and link each statement in the transcript to the conflicting email and prepare your cross examination.

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11.1 Importing transcripts

Importing transcripts into Relativity is the same process as importing any other type of native file.

Use the Relativity Desktop Client to import transcripts with a load file. See Importing document metadata, files, and extracted text in the Desktop Client guide.

11.2 Word index

A word index is a list of all non-noise words in the transcript. It includes the page number and line location of all occurrences of each word. It also includes the total number of times the word appears in the transcript. Before you can use the word index, you have to process the transcript. See Process transcripts in the Admin guide.

To access the word index, click the word index icon . The word index is sorted in alphanumeric order, so it begins with numbers. You can filter the columns to rearrange the order.

The index lists the each term location using the <page number>:<line number> syntax. For example, 2:15 means the term appears on page 2, line 15.

11.3 Links

Links are references to other documents in your workspace. You can only add links within transcripts, but you can link to any other document type. Linked text appears green in the transcript.

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11.3.1 Adding a link to a transcript

Before you can create a link, you have to process the transcript. See Process transcripts in the

Admin guide.

To add a link to a transcript:

1. Open a transcript from the Documents tab.

2. Highlight the text you want to hyperlink.

3. Right-click on the selected text, and click Link.

4. Select the radio button next to the document you want to link to.

5. Click Set.

Note: All links on the transcript appear in the related items pane.

12 Viewer

Relativity's viewer displays workspace documents. You can use the viewer menu to toggle the loaded formats of documents, such as native, image, extracted text, or production. Using the viewer, you can control the form of document that displays in the interface. If a document hasn't been imaged, you can image documents on the fly in the viewer.

If you don't see the document in the viewer, it either hasn't been loaded to the workspace, its conversion failed, or you don't have permission to see it.

In every mode of the viewer you have the option to Email Link to Document. By clicking , you can quickly send an email with a link to a specific document in Relativity. A new email message window opens and a secure link to the document copies into the body of the message.

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Note: In all applicable modes of the viewer, you can collapse an email header if the email header field contains more information than can be displayed on a single line. If you collapse or expand an email header, the viewer maintains the expanded or collapsed state as you move through documents in the set.

Using the viewer

Imagine you're a reviewer and your manager assigns you a batch of 50 documents to review. You open the batch and see a list of 50 Word documents, Lotus Notes files, and Outlook emails.

Unfortunately, you don’t have any of those applications installed on your computer, so you have to rely on Relativity’s viewer to open the documents.

Without the viewer you would need to have each file's native application installed locally on your machine, and even then the data might become corrupted by opening the files within their respective software applications by changing the date modified. With the viewer you can easily review any of these various file types without launching each relevant application while preserving the metadata.

You open the first file, an .NSF file, and recognize it as a Lotus Notes file. When you open it in the viewer it doesn’t render the document appropriately, so you click the Native radio button at the top. That displays the document how it would display in Lotus Notes, and you’re able to make your coding decision.

12.1 Viewer mode

Viewer mode displays an HTML rendering of the document that is as close to the original version of the document as possible. Viewer mode provides options for navigating through a single document and between documents in a document set. In Viewer mode you can also conduct text searching, highlighting, zooming, arranging, and saving pages you review. You also have the option to print single documents from the viewer by saving the document as a PDF. For more information, see

Save as PDF .

Note: Beginning in Relativity 9.0, you can view files that are password protected in Viewer mode if those files are run through a processing or imaging set and the password is in the password bank. For more information, see the Password bank section of the Processing User Guide.

When you open a document that has not yet been imaged, you have the option to image the document on the fly while in Viewer mode. For more information, see

Imaging on the fly on page 98 .

Viewer mode provides the following toolbar options:

Note: Relativity automatically hides toolbar buttons and controls that aren't applicable to the currently loaded document type so that your toolbar isn't cluttered while you're reviewing documents.

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n n

Show/Hide Persistent Highlight Pane

- displays or hides a panel containing all persistent highlight sets in the workspace.

Zoom Out/In

- zooms out and in on the current document in increments of 10% within a range of 10% to 500%. If you attempt to zoom out to a percentage lower than 10%, the viewer automatically sets the display to 10%. If you attempt to zoom in to a percentage higher than 500%, the viewer automatically sets the display to 500%. Your zoom setting persists as you navigate through a document set.

This means that if you've set one document to 150% and you go to the next document, the next document defaults to 150% zoom.

To specify a zoom percentage without using the zoom out/in toolbar buttons, type the number in the percentage field and press the Enter key.

n n n

Reset Zoom

- resets the zoom to 100%.

Find Previous/Next

- searches for terms in the current document and navigates through the hits.

This searches the entire document, not just the active page.

o o o o

Entering a term and either clicking the left or right arrow button or pressing Enter in this text box scrolls to and highlights the text of the next instance of the term (from the placement of the cursor).

Searching in this text box is not case sensitive

Search results match partially-entered words.

Matching is done on the literal character typed into the search-box, including non-alphanumeric characters. This means that the viewer doesn't treat non-alphanumeric characters as wildcards.

Fit Actual

- fits the document display to the actual size it was in its native application. By default, this resets the zoom percentage to 100%.

n

Fit Width

- increases the size of the document to fit the maximum width of the viewer. This setting persists when you re-size the window.

n

Fit Page

- fits the entire document into the total size of the page. Clicking this zooms out the document and reduces the font size.

n

Print/Save as PDF

- gives you the option of saving the current native document as a PDF file.

Beginning in Relativity 9.4.254.2, when you click this option, a new window appears stating Saving. The document then opens in a new window in your browser as a PDF where you can then choose to save or print the document image.

Prior to Relativity 9.4.254.2,clicking this option opens the following window, in which you must click

Save as PDF again to save the document as a PDF. Note that the options for saving an image as a PDF are different than for a native.

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After you click Save as PDF, a copy of the document converts to a PDF file you can save from your web browser downloads.

Relativity assigns Save as PDF file names based on the type of file you save. Refer to the following for the file name format specific to the available file types: n n n

Native - DocumentIdentifier_native.pdf

Image - DocumentIdentifier_image.pdf

Production - BatesNumber_ProductionName.pdf

Beginning in Relativity 9.4.254.2, when you click this option, a new window appears stating Saving.

The document then opens in a new window in your browser as a PDF where you can then choose to save or print the document image.

n

Show/Hide Hidden Cells

- displays or hides all hidden cells in a Microsoft Excel spreadsheet. This functionality is only available for Excel files and doesn't work on imaged documents because Relativity only images unhidden cells.

n

Go To Next/Previous Highlight

document.

- moves through previous and next highlighted terms in the n

About

- displays the version of the native file converter that converted the document when you opened it from the document list, the native document viewer version, and the latest installed version of the native document viewer. The icon is red if a version is out of date.

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n

If the "native document viewer version" doesn't match the "document converted by version", you'll receive a conversion mismatch warning when you try to view a document in the viewer. If you receive this, contact your system admin, as an upgrade may be required.

Note: If you don't have permission to the Local Access option on the Document object, you can't use the

Ctrl+C or Ctrl+Ins options in either Viewer or Extracted Text mode.

12.1.1 Copying text in the viewer

While viewing a document in Viewer mode, you have several right-click options, including the Copy option. Use this option to copy text from the document you're currently viewing and then paste it into another application.

To do this:

1. Highlight the text you want copied.

2. Right-click, and then select Copy from the menu.

3. Copy the text from the Copy Text window with another right-click, and then Copy or a Control+C or

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Command+C keyboard command.

You can't copy text if you: n n

Haven't highlighted any text.

Don't have permission to the Local Access option on the Document object. This is the same permission that allows you to open the file in its native application. For more information, see Object list in Relativity Admin guide.

12.2 Native mode

When you switch to Native mode, you're downloading or opening a document in its native form.

This option is only available if a native copy exists in Relativity for a document open in the viewer. If you don't see this option in the viewer, you may not have sufficient permissions or the Prevent

Native Download setting for that particular file type has been set to Yes.

To switch to Native mode, click Native on the mode menu.

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Note that your options for interacting with a document in Native mode are limited, in that the options available in Viewer and Image modes aren't available in Native mode.

If you are using the Native viewer in Internet Explorer 11 or 10, you must disable the Web

Accessibility Toolbar for the viewer to open a document in Native mode properly. To disable this add on:

1. Click the cog icon from the Internet Explorer browser.

2. Click Internet Options.

3. Click Manage add-ons from the Programs tab.

4. Find Web Accessibility Toolbar.

5. Click Web Accessibility Toolbar to disable the add-on.

6. Click Close.

7. Click Ok.

8. Close your browser and reopen.

When viewing documents with an .HTM, .HTML, or .XML extension in Native mode, the viewer displays the raw file markup instead of rendering the content.

You can control this option with the TreatHtmlAndXmlAsText instance setting, which is set to True by default. When set to True, this prevents JavaScript from executing when viewing these documents in the Native mode in the viewer.

You can control this option with the TreatHtmlAndXmlAsText instance setting, which is set to True by default. When set to True, this prevents JavaScript from executing when viewing these documents in the Native mode in the viewer. See the Instance Setting Guide to learn more about this new value.

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Pre the Relativity 9.2.337.3 - September 30, 2015 product update:

As of the Relativity 9.2.337.3 - September 30, 2015 product update:

12.3 Image mode

When you switch to Image mode, the viewer displays a TIFF or JPEG version of the document. You can highlight and redact images in this mode. Image mode is available only if you've loaded an

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imaged version of the document in the viewer or if you've manually imaged the file through the

Image button on the right side of the toolbar.

Note: The redactions that are burned into a produced image are the redactions that were on the image at the time that you produced it. If you add or remove redactions from an image after you've produced it, then the image and the produced version of that image will be out of sync.

The viewer displays the following icons for the image version of the document:

Note: Relativity automatically hides toolbar buttons and controls that aren't applicable to the currently loaded document type so that your toolbar isn't cluttered while you're reviewing documents.

n n

Show/Hide Thumbnails

- displays a thumbnail version of the document in a new pane on the left side of the viewer. Each page of the document you're reviewing has its own numbered thumbnail.

Zoom Out/In

- zooms out and in on the current document in increments of 10% within a range of 10% to 500%. If you attempt to zoom out to a percentage lower than 10%, the viewer automatically sets the display to 10%. If you attempt to zoom in to a percentage higher than 500%, the viewer automatically sets the display to 500%. Your zoom setting persists as you navigate through a document set.

This means that if you've set one document to 150% and you go to the next document, the next document defaults to 150% zoom.

To specify a zoom percentage without using the zoom out/in toolbar buttons, type the number in the percentage field and press the Enter key.

n n

Reset Zoom

- resets the zoom to 100%.

Fit Actual

- fits the document display to the actual size it was in its native application. By default, this resets the zoom percentage to 100%.

n

Fit Width

- increases the size of the document to fit the maximum width of the viewer. This setting persists when you re-size the window.

n

Fit Page

- fits the entire document into the total size of the page. Clicking this zooms out the document and reduces the font size.

n

Rotate all pages

- rotates all pages in a document clockwise 90 degrees.

n

Rotate current page

- rotates only the current page clockwise 90 degrees.

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Note: Image rotation is persistent. Any pages that you rotate will be rotated the next time you return to them in the viewer and for other users who view them after you rotate them. Rotation is also applied when you run the production containing the images.

n

Print/Save as PDF

- gives you the option of saving the image as a PDF. For more information, see

Saving an image as a PDF on the next page .

n

Selector

- select within a document.

n

Highlight - <Color>

- highlights the selected text with the color you specify from the drop-down.

The default color is yellow. Select from the following: o o o o o o

Pink

Orange

Yellow

Green

Blue

Purple n

Redact - <Style>

- enables single redaction tool. For more information on redacting, see

Creating basic redactions on page 39 . Select from the following types of redactions:

o o o o

Black - applies a solid black box to the selected text.

Cross - applies a white box with an X in the middle of it over the selected text.

Text - applies a box over the selected text, in which you can add text such as "Privileged" or

"Redacted."

White - applies a solid white box over the selected text.

n

Redact - Inverse

- enables the inverse redaction tool. For more information, see

Creating inverse redactions on page 39 .

n

Redact - Full page

- enables the full-page redaction tool. The drop-down menu for this redaction type offers the same options as the basic Redact icon, except that the redaction you choose is applied to the entire page. For example, if you select White, the entire page becomes white. For more information, see

Creating full-page redactions on page 40 .

n

Mass Redact

- apply a full-page redaction across all images or a range of images in the document.

For more information, see

Creating mass redactions on page 40

.

n

Font Size

- change the font size of the text within a text box redaction. For more information, see

Editing font size in text box redactions on page 43 .

n

Delete Redactions and Highlights

- mass delete markups from any or all images in the document.

For more information, see

Mass deleting markups on page 43

.

n n

Markup Visibility

- changes the visibility mode of the markups between full visibility, transparent and hidden. By default, this is set to Solid, which means all highlights and redactions appear as solid as you applied them. For more information, see

Controlling markup visibility on page 44 .

Delete Images button - click to delete an existing document image.

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Note: If you don't have permission to the Local Access option on the Document object, you can't use the

Ctrl+C or Ctrl+Ins options in either Viewer or Extracted Text mode.

12.3.1 Saving an image as a PDF

Clicking this icon brings up the following window, in which you can specify your PDF settings: n n

Print range - select from the following standard print range options: o o

All images - saves all images in the document.

Current image - saves only the image you're currently on.

o

Image range - saves a range of images that you specify in the text box to the right.

Print options- select from the following options: o o

Print highlights- check this box to include in the PDF any highlights that you added to the images in the document.

Print redactions- check this box to include in the PDF any redactions you applied to the images in the document. If you check this box, select one of the following redaction display options: l

Normal- saves the PDF with the redactions displayed normally, as you applied them to the images in the document.

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l

Transparent - saves the PDF with semi-transparent redactions. Note that with this option, the reader of the PDF can see both the text under the redaction and a trace of the redaction itself.

Note: Transparent redactions are useful when an attorney needs to access a hard copy

(because they are unable to log in to a Relativity environment) of a document in order to approve the redactions that someone else applied to that document. In this case, the attorney needs a printed copy of the document that clearly displays both the redacted text and the fact that the text was redacted. Transparent redactions are also relevant when a judge needs to decide if one side of the litigation covered up too much a piece of evidence (the document).

o o o

Print slip sheet- includes a slip sheet between the images in the document. If you check this box, you must select one of the following from the drop-down to the right: l l l

(Blank Page)- includes a blank page slip sheet.

(Identifier Only)- includes a page with the document identifier stamped on it.

<Document layouts> - includes a slip sheet with the fields from any document coding layout. The values for the document are shown for those fields.

Stamp identifier- select whether you’d like to print any identifier value on the images in the PDF.

You have the following options: l l

None - doesn't include any identifier.

Document Identifier- includes the images' document identifiers.

l

Image Number- includes the images' page identifiers.

Stamp location- select the location on each image in which you'd like either the Document Identifier or the Image Number stamp to appear. This is not available if you selected None for the

Stamp identifier setting. Select from the following locations: l l l l l l

Top Left

Top Center

Top Right

Bottom Left

Bottom Center

Bottom Right

12.4 Extracted text mode

When you switch to Extracted Text or Long Text mode, the viewer toolbar displays a drop-down menu of extracted text and all long text fields made available in the viewer on the field edit/creation page. See Creating fields in the Admin guide. The drop-down menu lists long-text fields that contain text for the current document open in the viewer and those you have permissions to.

Note: Relativity displays all long text fields made available in the viewer in the drop-down menu, regardless of whether that field contains text for the current document. If you select a long text field from the dropdown, and the current document doesn't have text for that field, the viewer appears blank.

Extracted text mode provides the following options:

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Note: Relativity automatically hides toolbar buttons and controls that aren't applicable to the currently loaded document type so that your toolbar isn't cluttered while you're reviewing documents.

n n

Show/Hide Persistent Highlight Pane

- displays or hides a panel containing all persistent highlight sets in the workspace.

Zoom Out/In

- zooms out and in on the current document in increments of 10% within a range of 10% to 500%. If you attempt to zoom out to a percentage lower than 10%, the viewer automatically sets the display to 10%. If you attempt to zoom in to a percentage higher than 500%, the viewer automatically sets the display to 500%. Your zoom setting persists as you navigate through a document set.

This means that if you've set one document to 150% and you go to the next document, the next document defaults to 150% zoom.

To specify a zoom percentage without using the zoom out/in toolbar buttons, type the number in the percentage field and press the Enter key.

n n

Reset zoom

- resets the zoom function to 100 percent.

Find previous and next

- searches for terms in the current document and navigates through the hits.

o o o o o

Entering a term and either clicking the left or right arrow button or pressing Enter in this text box scrolls to and highlights the text of the next instance of the term (from the placement of the cursor).

Searching in this text box is not case sensitive

Search results match partially-entered words.

Matching is done on the literal character typed into the search-box, including non-alphanumeric characters. This means that the viewer doesn't treat non-alphanumeric characters as wildcards.

When you've reached the last term in a multi-page document, a pop-up modal will appear prompting you to change the page. Click Close and use the file navigator to move to the next page.

n

Fit Width

- fits the document to the window. This function is only available in the preview mode.

n

Go To Next/Previous Highlight

- moves through previous and next highlighted terms in the document. For multi-page files, use the file navigator at the bottom of the page to move to the next highlighted term.

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Note: If you don't have permission to the Local Access option on the Document object, you can't use the

Ctrl+C or Ctrl+Ins options in either Viewer or Extracted Text mode.

12.5 Productions mode

When you switch to Productions mode, the viewer toolbar displays a drop-down menu of available production sets that contain the document currently open in the viewer. For information about creating production sets, see Production sets in the Admin guide.

Note: The redactions that are burned into a produced image are the redactions that were on the image at the time that you produced it. If you add or remove redactions from an image after you've produced it, then the image and the produced version of that image will be out of sync.

Select a production set from the drop-down menu to see how a document was produced in the selected production. If a document isn't included in a production, the productions mode option is unavailable.

Productions mode provides the following options:

Note: Relativity automatically hides toolbar buttons and controls that aren't applicable to the currently loaded document type so that your toolbar isn't cluttered while you're reviewing documents.

n n

Show/Hide Thumbnails

- displays or hides a panel containing thumbnail images for pages of a document open in the viewer.

Zoom Out/In

- zooms out and in on the current document in increments of 10% within a range of 10% to 500%. If you attempt to zoom out to a percentage lower than 10%, the viewer automatically sets the display to 10%. If you attempt to zoom in to a percentage higher than 500%, the viewer automatically sets the display to 500%. Your zoom setting persists as you navigate through a document set.

This means that if you've set one document to 150% and you go to the next document, the next document defaults to 150% zoom.

To specify a zoom percentage without using the zoom out/in toolbar buttons, type the number in the percentage field and press the Enter key.

n n

Reset zoom

- resets the zoom function to 100 percent.

Fit Actual

- fits the document display to the actual size it was in its native application. By default, this resets the zoom percentage to 100%.

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n

Fit Width

- increases the size of the document to fit the maximum width of the viewer. This setting persists when you re-size the window.

n

Fit Page

- fits the entire document into the total size of the page. Clicking this zooms out the document and reduces the font size.

n

Rotate all pages

- rotates all pages in a document clockwise 90 degrees.

n

Rotate current page

- rotates only the current page clockwise 90 degrees.

Note: Image rotation is persistent. Any pages that you rotate are rotated the next time you return to them in the viewer and for other users. Rotation is also applied when you run the production containing the images.

n

Print/Save as PDF

- gives you the option of saving the image as a PDF. For more information, see

Saving an image as a PDF on page 94

.

n

About

- displays the version of the production viewer. The icon is red if a version is out of date.

12.6 Imaging on the fly

You can image a single document on the fly using the Image button in the viewer.

Note: The Image button is disabled if the Processing application isn't installed.

Using this feature, you can select any imaging profile you have permissions to view and use it to image the document.

Note: If the source file of the document you are imaging is changed during the conversion process, for example through overlay, that document becomes undeliverable and you receive an error. To resolve this error, refresh the page or re-image the document.

After imaging a document on the fly, you can access thumbnail renderings of the imaged pages of the document.

Imaging some file formats can cause problems. Consider the following: n

Many PDFs render and image very well. However, you may have problems rendering and imaging some PDFs due to the variety of their content.

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n n

While most Microsoft Office documents render and image well, you may experience issues when imaging documents with embedded files.

You may have problems rendering and imaging vector-based documents like Visio and CAD.

For more information, see the Viewer-Supported File Types guide.

Note: The default priority for all image-on-the-fly jobs is determined by the current value of theImageOnTheFlyJobPriorityDefault entry in the Instance setting table.

12.6.1 Image-on-the-fly process

The following graphic and accompanying steps depict what happens behind the scenes when you run an imaging job. These apply to imaging sets, mass imaging operations, and image-on-the-fly requests.

This is for reference purposes only.

(Click to expand)

1. The client’s browser sends image requests via HTTP POST to the conversion API hosted in the Imaging application on the Relativity web server.

2. The conversion API communicates with the SQL Server to prepare the image requests.

3. The conversion API sends the prepared image requests in batches of 1,000 via the TCP-WCF service endpoint to Invariant. The number of requests per batch is configurable.

4. Invariant retrieves the documents from the file server via a standard field I/O stream.

5. Invariant writes the images contained in the request to a temporary location on the file server.

6. Invariant sends a notification of the image request completion to the conversion API via HTTP-WebAPI endpoint. Completion notifications are sent for every document.

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7. The conversion API updates the Relativity data stored in the SQL Server so that Relativity communicates the image progress/completion to the user.

8. The client’s browser periodically polls the conversion API for updates throughout the imaging process.

9. The conversion API writes files to a permanent destination directory in the file server.

12.7 Stand-alone document viewer

To view the document in a separate browser window, click the stand-alone document viewer icon in the upper right of the core reviewer interface. This opens another viewer pane with an

Unsynced designation at the top of the screen. This means that the stand-alone viewer isn't yet set to synchronize with the core reviewer interface.

To synchronize the standalone viewer with the core viewer, click Unsynced. This switches the standalone viewer setting to Synced where you can view text and images, natives, and productions sideby-side while navigating through the document queue.

Note: Keyboard shortcuts are available for use in the stand-alone viewer. For example, if you execute the shortcut for Save & Next in the stand-alone viewer, each window performs the operation and moves to the next document.

12.8 Related items pane

The related items pane is located at the bottom-right corner of the core reviewer interface. Related items are customizable groups of documents within a workspace. Common examples are family groups, duplicates, or similar documents.

The related items toolbar includes the following:

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n n

Related items

- displays a group of documents related to the active document.

Options vary within the workspace. Hover over each icon to display the name of the item. Examples include: family group, duplicates, and thread group.

RAR Overturn Analysis

- displays overturned documents, seed documents, and seed excerpts. For more information about this functionality, see Reports in the Assisted Review Guide.

n

Document history

- displays a history of actions taken on the current document. You may not have access to document history. If you store your audits in Data Grid, this displays the field name, old value, and new value.

Note: In the document history pane, you can click the Details link to display a pop-up with the audit history for the document. Click Run Details to display information about document imaging jobs, including the name of the imaging profile and the formatting options used during mass imaging or imaging on the fly.

n n n

Production

- displays all productions in which the document was included. You may not have permissions to view production information.

Linked

- displays all linked records on the active document.

Search results

- displays the results of a Relativity Analytics search.

n

Batch sets

- shows all the batch sets for the active record. See Batches in the Admin manual. You may not have permissions to view this section.

Use the related items pane to quickly identify documents related to the active document. You can also use this pane act on those groups of related items.

For instance, in the example of the related items pane below, the active document is highlighted and listed with two related family documents. You can select some or all of the documents in the related items pane and click Go. This opens a window for you to access all of your active layouts – the same layouts available in the layouts pane. Using these layouts, you can make coding decisions and apply them to the selected documents using mass editing. See Mass edit in the Admin guide.

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12.9 Thumbnail viewer

When in Image or Productions mode, you can access and browse thumbnail renderings of a document's pages. Quickly scan, locate, and navigate to pages in an open document.

Any highlightsor redactions you apply to images won't appear in the thumbnail viewer images. See

Markups on page 37 .

To open the thumbnail viewer when in Image or Productions mode, click the Show/Hide

Thumbnails

button on the viewer toolbar. The thumbnail viewer opens on the left side of the screen. Scroll up and down to navigate all pages in the open document and click a page to view it.

Note: To access to the thumbnail viewer, you must have the Admin Operation permission View Image

Thumbnails. If you don't have this permission, contact your system admin.

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The number of thumbnail images in a set is determined by the size of your browser window. Resize your browser window to view a different number of thumbnails per set.

12.10 Adding information to CaseMap

You can capture documents and text in the Relativity viewer for analysis in the CaseMap tool. You can then use a mass operation to export the data to CaseMap. See Send to CaseMap in the Admin guide for details.

Note: CaseMap is not compatible with Windows 8.

12.10.1 Adding a document to CaseMap

Note: When you manually map fields for documents ensure to map the control number of the document to CaseMap's full name field in order for fact to document linking to work properly.

To add a document to a CaseMap database from the viewer:

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1. Right-click the document and select Case Map> Add to CaseMap.

This action results in the download of a .cmbulk file. Your browser may prompt you with the options to open or save the downloaded .cmbulk file.

2. Open the .cmbulk file download from your browser to launch the Bulk 'Send to CaseMap' Wizard.

3. Select Yes.

4. Click Next.

5. Click Next to Confirm the Destination CaseMap Case. The View/Edit Field Mappings... window opens.

6. Click Modify.... The Field Mappings: Document Spreadsheet opens.

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7. Click Advanced > Advanced Mappings.

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8. (Optional) Click the CaseMap Field Name and then click Modify.... The Modify Item window opens.

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9. (Optional) Select Add a source data field and then select the source data field.

10. (Optional) Click Ok to close the Modify Item window.

11. (Optional) Click Ok to close the Advanced Field Mappings: Document Spreadsheet window.

12. Click Ok to close the Field Mappings: Document Spreadsheet window.

13. Click Next.

14. Click Finish.

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The document appears in CaseMap.

12.10.1.1 Linking a document to CaseMap

Next, you must link the document to CaseMap:

1. Choose the CaseMap category for the document (Document, Pleading, Proceeding, Research Authority, or Other).

2. Enter a Full Name for the new document you're linking to CaseMap.

3. Enter a Short Name for the document you're linking.

4. (Optional) Click Advanced to Save or Save & Edit the document linking information you've already entered.

5. Click OK.

12.10.2 Adding a fact to CaseMap

In addition to adding a document to CaseMap, you can add a highlighted text excerpt from a document as a fact. To add a fact to CaseMap:

Relativity | User Guide - 108

1. Highlight the text, right-click and select Case Map> Add Fact.

This action results in the download of a .cmbulk file. Your browser may prompt you with the options to open or save the downloaded .cmbulk file.

2. Open the .cmbulk file download from your browser to launch the Bulk 'Send to CaseMap' Wizard.

3. Click Next on the Welcome to the Bulk 'Send to CaseMap' Wizard dialog.

4. Click Next to confirm the destination CaseMap case.

5. Click Finish to send the fact text to CaseMap.

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6. Click OK to confirm the number of records sent to CaseMap from Relativity.

7. Link the source document to CaseMap if you haven't yet done so. See

Linking a document to CaseMap on page 108

.

8. Click OK to add the highlighted text as a fact.

You can then see the new fact when you view your CaseMap.

12.10.3 Modifying field mapping for facts

If you edited your field mappings in a previous Add Fact operation, the Welcome dialog of the Bulk

'Send to CaseMap' wizard presents you with an option to view or edit your existing field mappings.

To view and edit your field mappings from the wizard:

Note: The full range of Unicode characters is not supported by CaseMap.

Relativity | User Guide - 110

1. Select the Yes radio button.

2. Click Next.

3. Click Next to confirm the Destination CaseMap Case.

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4. Click Modify on the View/Edit Field Mappings dialog in the fact records tab.

5. Map the source data fields to your CaseMap fields.

6. Click the Advanced drop down and select Advanced Mappings. The Advanced Field Mappings Spread-

Relativity | User Guide - 112

sheet opens.

7. Ensure the Mapped Fields radio button is selected.

8. Select Link Object short names (description fields only).

Note: Select this option only for the Source(s) field, not the Fact Text field.

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9. Click Yes.

10. Click Ok.

11. Click Ok on the View/Edit Field Mappings dialog after mapping your fields.

12. Click Next.

13. Click Finish.

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12.11 Relativity Compare

You can use Relativity Compare to view the key differences between the extracted text of two documents. To access the Relativity Compare system field, you must first add it to a view. See Views in the Admin guide.

To compare two documents in Relativity from the document list:

Relativity | User Guide - 115

1. Click to open the Document Compare selection window. By default the document identifier of the selected document populates the Document Compare window.

2. Click displays.

by the With field to select a document with which to compare it. A Select Item pop-up window

Note: You can change the value of either of the fields at any time while in the Document Compare window.

3. Select the desired document from the list and click Set. The Document Compare window displays the selected document in the With field.

4. Click Compare. The window displays the similarities and differences between the documents.

5. The similarities and differences between the documents are reflected in the legend at the bottom of the window: n n n

Inserted - Text appears in the "With" document but doesn't appear in the "Compare" document.

Deleted - Text appears in the "Compare" document but doesn't appear in the "With" document.

Unchanged -Text appears in both documents.

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You can also compare related documents from within the viewer. To compare related documents in the viewer, open the Related Items pane and click next to the document you want to compare.

The Document Compare selection window opens. The document you select from the Related Items pane automatically populates in the With field, while the document open in the viewer automatically populates the Compare field.

12.12 Viewer-supported file types

Relativity uses Oracle Outside In to display rendered versions of native files within the legacy

ActiveX viewer. Reviewers can see how the file looked in its native application without opening the file in that native application.

This document provides a comprehensive list of files types supported by the viewer, according to

Oracle. This list applies to version 2016.2.

Relativity | User Guide - 117

See the Admin guide for more information on the viewer.

Note: Relativity does not support any third-party applications after the user downloads a file. This includes specific browser and media-player combinations, such as Internet Explorer and Windows Media Player.

12.12.1 Text only designation

Some file types have a "text only" designation. When viewing these files in the viewer mode of the

Relativity viewer, the document's text is the only data that renders. For Microsoft Project files and

XML files, the view doesn't display items such as Gantt charts, icons, or other graphics. There is typically no formatting (bold, italics, fonts, etc.) of the text.

12.12.2 File ID only designation

Some file types have a "file ID only" designation. The viewer is able to identify the file ID correctly, but it returns an error message indicating that the file format is not supported. Despite returning an error message, the viewer identifies the file so that you can easily locate it and open it in an alternate application.

12.12.3 File identification values in Outside In 2016.2

Before referring to the list of file types supported in Outside In 2016.2, you may want to note the following changes in file identification values from version 8.5.0 to version 8.5.3.

12.12.4 File types supported in Oracle 2016.2

The viewer supports the following native file types. The supported file types are listed by category.

Program/File Type

7z

Category

Archive

Type/Version

Note: BZIP2 and split archives are not supported.

Apache Office Calc (ODF 1.2) Spreadsheet

Apache Office Draw (ODF 1.2) Presentation

Apache Office Impress (ODF

1.2)

Presentation

3.x, 4.x

3.x, 4.x

3.x, 4.x

Apache Office Writer (ODF 1.2) Word processer 3.x, 4.x

Apple iWork Keynote File Word processer

Vector Apple iWork Keynote File Preview

Apple iWork Keynote Numbers

File

Spreadsheet

Apple iWork Keynote Numbers

File Preview

Vector

File Extension

.7z

Relativity | User Guide - 118

Program/File Type Category

Apple iWork Pages File Word processer

Apple iWork Pages File Preview Vector

AutoCAD Drawing Vector

Corel Presentations

Flexiondoc (XML)

Type/Version

2013

Presentation X6

Word processer v5.7

Harvard Graphics

Libre Office Calc (ODF 1.2)

Libre Office Draw (ODF 1.2)

Vector

Spreadsheet

Presentation

98

3.x, 4.x

3.x, 4.x

Libre Office Impress (ODF 1.2) Presentation 3.x, 4.x

Libre Office Writer (ODF 1.2) Word processor 3.x, 4.x

Microsoft Access Database 2007/2010

Microsoft OneNote File

Office Calc (ODF 1.2)

PKZip

Quattro Pro Win

7z Self Extracting exe

Word processor

Spreadsheet

Archive

Spreadsheet

Archive

4.x

X7

Note: BZIP2 and split archives are not supported.

LZA Self Extracting Compress Archive

LZH Compress Archive

Microsoft Office Binder Archive

Microsoft Cabinet (CAB)

RAR

Self-extracting .exe

Archive

Archive

Archive

UNIX Compress

UNIX GZip

UNIX tar

Uuencode

Zip

DataEase

DBase

First Choice DB

Archive

Archive

Archive

Archive

Archive

Database

Database

Database

Framework DB Database

Microsoft Access (text only) Database

Microsoft Works DB for DOS Database

Microsoft Works DB for Macintosh

Database

Microsoft Works DB for Windows

Database

Microsoft Works DB for DOS Database

95, 97

1.5, 2.0, 2.9

PKZip, WinZip

4.x

III, IV, V

Through 3.0

3.0

1.0, 2.0, 95 - 2010

2.0

2.0

3.0, 4.0

1.0

Relativity | User Guide - 119

File Extension

.dwg

.shw

.xml

.cht

.accdb

.one

.zip

.qpw

.exe

.z

.gz

.tar

.uue

.zip

.dba

.dbf

.fol

.lza

.lzh

.obd

.cab

.rar

.exe

.accdb, .mdb

.wdb

.wdb

.wdb

.wdb

Program/File Type

Paradox for DOS

Paradox for Windows

Q&A Database

R:Base

Reflex

SmartWare II DB

Category

Database

Database

Database

Database

Database

Database

Apple Mail Message (EMLX) Email

Encoded mail messages Email

EML with Digital Signature

IBM Lotus Notes Domino XML

Language DXL

IBM Lotus Notes NSF (Win32,

Win64, Linux x86-32 and Oracle

Solaris 32-bit only with Notes

Client or Domino Server)

MBOX Mailbox

Microsoft Outlook (MSG)

Microsoft Outlook (OST )

Email

Email

Email

Email

Email

Email

Microsoft Outlook (PST)

Microsoft Outlook Express

(EML)

Email

Email

Microsoft Outlook Forms Template (OFT)

Email

Microsoft Outlook PST (Mac) Email

MSG with Digital Signature Email

AVI (Metadata only) Multimedia

Flash (text extraction only)

MP3 (ID3 metadata only)

MPEG – 1 Audio layer 3 V ID3 v1 (Metadata only)

MPEG – 1 Audio layer 3 V ID3 v2 (Metadata only)

Multimedia

Multimedia

Multimedia

Multimedia

MPEG – 4 (Metadata only)

MPEG – 7 (Metadata only)

Multimedia

Multimedia

Quick Time (Metadata only) Multimedia

RFC 822

97 - 2013

97 - 2010, 2013

97 - 2013

Type/Version

2.0 - 4.0

1.0

Through 2.0

File Extension

.db

.db

.db

R:Base 5000, R:Base System V .rb1, .rb2, .rb3

2.0

.rdx

1.02

2.0

.db

.emlx

n n n n n n n

SMIME

8.5

MHT

Multi Part Alternative

Multi Part Digest

Multi Part Mixed

Multi Part News Group

Multi Part Signed

TNEF

.eml

.xml

8.x

.nsf. .ntf

97 - 2013

2001

SMIME

6.x, 7.x, Lite

.pst

.msg

.avi

.swf

.mp3

.mpg

.mpg

.mpg

.mpg

.mpg

.mbox

.msg

.ost

.pst

.eml

.oft

Relativity | User Guide - 120

Program/File Type Category

WAV (Metadata only)

Windows Media ASF

(Metadata only)

Windows Media Audio WMA

(Metadata only)

Windows Media DVR-MS

(Metadata only)

Multimedia

Multimedia

Multimedia

Multimedia

Windows Media Video WMV

(Metadata only)

Microsoft Live Messenger (via

XML filter)

Multimedia

Other

Microsoft OneNote (text only) Other

Microsoft Project (sheet view only, Gantt Chart, Network Dia-

Other gram, and graph not supported)

Microsoft Project (sheet view only, Gantt Chart, Network Diagram, and graph not sup-

Other ported)

Microsoft Windows DLL Other

Microsoft Windows Executable Other

Performance Filter

Trillian Text Log File (via text filter) vCalendar vCard

Other

Other

Other

Other

Other

Presentation

Yahoo! Messenger

Apple iWork Keynote (MacOS, text and PDF preview)

Harvard Graphics Presentation

DOS

IBM Lotus Symphony Presentations

Kingsoft WPS Presentation

Lotus Freelance

Lotus Freelance for OS/3

Presentation

Presentation

Presentation

Presentation

Presentation

Lotus Freelance for Windows Presentation

Microsoft PowerPoint for

Macintosh

Presentation

Type/Version

10.0

2007, 2010, 2013

98-2013

2007, 2010, 2013

2300

4.2

2.1

2.1

6.x – 8

09

3.0

1.x

2010

1.0 - Millennium 9.8

2

95, 97, SmartSuite 9.8

4.0 - 2011

File Extension

.wav

.asf

.wma

.dvr-ms

.wmv

.one

.mpp

.prz

.ppt

.mpp

.dll

.dll

.txt

.vcs

.vcf

.yps

.key, .keynote

.prs

Relativity | User Guide - 121

Program/File Type

Microsoft PowerPoint for Windows

Microsoft PowerPoint for Windows Slideshow

Microsoft PowerPoint for Windows Template

Category

Presentation

Presentation

Presentation

Novell Presentations

OpenOffice Impress

Oracle Open Office Impress

Presentation

Presentation

Presentation

StarOffice Impress Presentation

Strict Open XML Presentation Presentation

WordPerfect Presentations

Adobe Photoshop

Presentation

Raster image

Adobe Photoshop XMP only Raster image

CALS Raster (GP4) Raster image

Computer Graphics Metafile Raster image

Encapsulated PostScript (EPS) Raster image

GEM Image (Bitmap)

Graphics Interchange Format

(GIF)

IBM Graphics Data Format

(GDF)

IBM Picture Interchange

Format

JBIG2

Raster image

Raster image

Raster image

Raster image

Raster image

JFIF (JPEG not in TIFF format) Raster image

JPEG Raster image

JPEG 2000 Raster image

Kodak Flash Pix

Kodak Photo CD

Lotus PIC

Lotus Snapshot

Macintosh PICT

Macintosh PICT2

MacPaint

Microsoft Windows Bitmap

Microsoft Windows Cursor

Microsoft Windows Icon

OS/2 Bitmap

OS/2 Warp Bitmap

Raster image

Raster image

Raster image

Raster image

Raster image

Raster image

Raster image

Raster image

Raster image

Raster image

Raster image

Raster image

Type/Version

3.0 – 2013

2007-2013

2007-2013

3.0, 7.0

1.1, 3.0

3.x

5.2 - 9.0

2013

5.1 - X5

4.0

8.0 - 10.0 (CS 1-5)

Type I-II

ANSI, CALS, NIST

TIFF Header only

1.0

1.0

Graphic Embeddings in PDF

.psd

.cg4, .cal

.cgm

.eps

.bmp

.gif

.gdf

.pif

File Extension

.ppt

.ppt

.pot

.shw

.sdd

.odp

.sda, .sdd

JP2

1.0

BMP only

BMP only

.jfif

.jpg

.fpx

.pcd

.pic

.bmp

.bmp

.pntg

.bmp

.ico

Relativity | User Guide - 122

Program/File Type Category

Paint Shop Pro (Win32 only) Raster image

PC Paintbrush (PCX) Raster image

Raster image PC Paintbrush DCX (multi-page

PCX)

Portable Bitmap (PBM) Raster image

Portable Graymap PGM

Portable Network Graphics

(PNG)

Portable Pixmap (PPM)

Raster image

Raster image

Progressive JPEG

StarOffice Draw

Sun Raster

Raster image

Raster image

Raster image

Raster image

TIFF

TIFF CCITT

TruVision TGA (Targa)

WBMP wireless graphics format

Word Perfect Graphics

WordPerfect Graphics

X-Windows Bitmap

X-Windows Dump

Raster image

Raster image

Raster image

Raster image

Raster image

Raster image

Raster image

Raster image

X-Windows Pixmap

Apple iWork Numbers (MacOS, text, and PDF preview)

Enable Spreadsheet

First Choice SS

Framework SS

IBM Lotus Symphony Spreadsheets

Raster image

Spreadsheet

Spreadsheet

Spreadsheet

Spreadsheet

Spreadsheet

Kingsoft WPS Spreadsheets Spreadsheet

Lotus 1-2-3 Spreadsheet

Lotus 1-2-3 Charts (DOS and

Windows)

Spreadsheet

Lotus 1-2-3 for OS/2

Microsoft Excel Charts

Spreadsheet

Spreadsheet

Microsoft Excel for Macintosh Spreadsheet

Microsoft Excel for Windows Spreadsheet

Microsoft Excel for Windows

(text only)

Spreadsheet

Type/Version

5.0, 6.0

6.x - 9.0

Group 5 & 6

Group 3 & 4

2.0

1.0

2.0 – 10.0

x10 compatible x10 compatible x10 compatible

09

3.0 - 4.5

Through 3.0

3.0

1.x

2010

Through Millennium 9.8

Through 5.0

2.0

2.x - 2007

98 – 2011

3.0 - 2016

2003 XML

.wk1, .wk3, .wk4, .wks

.wk1, .wk3, .wk4, .wks

.xlsx, .xls

.xlsx, .xls

.xlsx, .xls

.xml

File Extension

.psp

.pcx

.dcx

.pbm

.pgm

.png

.ppm

.jpg, .jpeg, .jpe

.srs

.tif, .tiff

.tga

.wpg

.wpg, .wpg2

.xbm

.xdm

.xpm

.numbers

Relativity | User Guide - 123

Program/File Type

Microsoft Excel for Windows

(.xlsb)

Category

Spreadsheet

Microsoft Works SS for DOS Spreadsheet

Microsoft Works SS for Macintosh

Spreadsheet

Spreadsheet Microsoft Works SS for Windows

Multiplan Spreadsheet

Spreadsheet Novell PerfectWorks Spreadsheet

OpenOffice Calc

Oracle Open Office Calc

PFS: Plan

QuattroPro for DOS

QuattroPro for Windows

SmartWare II SS

Spreadsheet

Spreasheet

Spreadsheet

Spreadsheet

Spreadsheet

Spreadsheet

SmartWare Spreadsheet

StarOffice Calc

Strict Open XML

SuperCalc

Symphony

VP-Planner

ANSI Text

ASCII Text

DOS character set

EBCDIC

HTML (CSS rendering not supported)

IBM DCA/RFT

Type/Version

2007-2013 (Binary)

2.0

2.0

3.0, 4.0

4.0

2.0

1.1-3.0

3.x

1.0

Through 5.0

Through X5

1.02

Spreadsheet

Spreadsheet

Spreadsheet

5.2 – 9.0

2013 - 2016

Spreadsheet

Spreadsheet

5.0

Through 2.0

Spreadsheet 1.0

Text and markup 7 & 8 bit

Text and markup 7 & 8 bit

Text and markup

Text and markup

Text and markup 1.0 – 4.0

Macintosh character set

Rich Text Format (RTF)

Unicode Text

UTF-8

Wireless Markup Language

XML (text only)

Adobe Illustrator

Adobe Illustrator (PDF Preview only)

Adobe Illustrator XMP

Adobe InDesign XMP

Text and markup

Text and markup

Text and markup

Text and markup 3.0, 4.0

Text and markup

Text and markup

Text and markup

Vector image

Vector image

Vector image

Vector image

4.0 – 7.0, 9.0

9.0, CS1-6

11 – 13 (CS 1 - 5)

3.0 – 5.0 (CS 1 - 5)

Relativity | User Guide - 124

.rtf

.txt

.wml

.xml

.pdf

.cal

.wrk

.ans

.asc

File Extension

.xlsb

.wks

.wks

.wks

.sylk

.wpw

.sdc

.sdc

.wb1

.qpw, .wb3, .wb2, .wb1

.def

.def

.sdc

.html

Program/File Type

Adobe InDesign Interchange

XMP only

Adobe PDF

Adobe PDF Package

Adobe PDF Portfolio

Ami Draw

AutoCAD Drawing

AutoShade Rendering

Corel Draw

Corel Draw Clipart

Category

Vector image

Vector image

Vector image

Vector image

Vector image

Vector image

Vector image

Vector image

Vector image

Enhanced Metafile (EMF)

Escher Graphics

Vector image

Vector image

FrameMaker Graphics (FMV) Vector image

Gem File (Vector) Vector image

Harvard Graphics Chart DOS Vector image

Harvard Graphics for Windows Vector image

HP Graphics Language Vector image

IGES Drawing Vector image

Micrografx Designer

Micrografx Designer

Micrografx Draw

Vector image

Vector image

Vector image

Novell PerfectWorks Draw

OpenOffice Draw

Oracle Open Office Draw

SVG (processed as XML, not rendered)

Vector image

Vector image

Vector image

Vector image

Microsoft Visio:

Vector image

Type/Version

5.0 – 2007, 2013 n n n n n

Stencil

Template

Macro Enabled Drawing

Macro Enabled Stencil

Macro Enabled Template

Visio (Page Preview mode

WMF/EMF)

Windows Metafile

Vector image

Vector image

4.0

Adobe FrameMaker (MIF only) Word processing 3.0 - 6.0

Adobe Illustrator Postscript Word processing Level 2

Ami Word processing

Ami Pro for OS2 Word processing

File Extension

1.0 – 1.7 (Acrobat 1 - 10)

1.7 (Acrobat 8 - 10)

1.7 (Acrobat 8 - 10)

.pdf

.pdf

.pdf

SDW .sdw

2.5, 2.6, 9.0-14.0, 2000i -20012 .dwg

2

X4 - X7

5.0, 7.0

.rnd

.cdr

.cmx

3.0 – 5.0

2.0 – 3.0

2.0

5.1 – 5.3

Version 6

Through 3.1

Through 4.0

.emf

.egr

.fmv

.img

.ch3

.prs

.hp, .hpg

.iges

.dsf

.drw

.drw

2.0

1.1 – 3.0

3.x

.sda

.sda

.xml

.vsd

.wmf, .emf

.vmf

.mif

.eps

.sam

Relativity | User Guide - 125

Program/File Type

Ami Pro for Windows

Apple iWork Pages (MacOS, text and PDF preview)

DEC DX

DEC DX Plus

Enable Word Processor

First Choice WP

Framework WP

Hangul

IBM DCA/FFT

Category Type/Version

Word processing 2.0, 3.0

Word processing 09

IBM DisplayWrite

IBM Writing Assistant

Ichitaro

JustWrite

Kingsoft WPS Writer

Legacy

Lotus Manuscript

Lotus WordPro (text only)

MacWrite II

Mail Rule DXL

Mass 11

Word processing Through 3.0

Word processing 2010

Word processing 1.1

Word processing Through 2.0

Word processing 9.7, 96 - Millennium 9.8

Word processing 1.1

Word processing

Word processing Through 8.0

Microsoft Word for DOS Word processing 4.0 – 6.0

Microsoft Word for Macintosh Word processing 4.0-6.0, 98 - 2016

Microsoft Word for Windows Word processing 1.0 – 2016

Microsoft WordPad Word processing

Microsoft Works WP for DOS Word processing 2.0

Microsoft Works WP for MacinWord processing 2.0

tosh

Microsoft Works WP for Windows

Word processing 3.0, 4.0

File Extension

.sam

.pages

Word processing Through 4.0

Word processing 4.0, 4.1

Word processing 3.0 - 4.5

Word processing 1.0, 3.0

Word processing 3.0

Word processing 97 - 2010

Word processing

.dx

.dx, .wpl

.pfx

.hwp

.dca, .fft

Word processing 2.0-5.0

Word processing 1.01

.rft, .dca

.iwa

Word processing 5.0, 6.0, 8.0 - 13.x, 2004 - 2014 .jtd

.jw

.wps

.leg

.manu

.lwp, .mwp

.mcw

.m11

.doc

.doc

.doc, .docx

.rtf

.wps

.wps

.wps

Microsoft Write for Windows Word processing 1.0 – 3.0

MultiMate Word processing Through 4.0

MultiMate Advantage Word processing 2.0

Navy DIF

Nota Bene

Word processing

Word processing 3.0

Novell PerfectWorks Word Processor

Word processing 2.0

OfficeWriter

OpenOffice Writer

Oracle Open Office Writer

Word processing 4.0-6.0

Word processing 1.1 - 3.0

Word processing 3.x

.wri

.dox

.dox

.dif

.nb

.wpw

.sdw

.sdw

Relativity | User Guide - 126

Program/File Type

PC File Doc

PFS: Write

Category Type/Version

Word processing 5.0

Word processing A, B

Professional Write for DOS Word processing 1.0, 2.0

Professional Write Plus for WinWord processing 1.0

dows

Q&A Write

Samna Word IV

Samna Word IV+

Signature

SmartWare II WP

Sprint

StarOffice Writer

Strict Open XML Document

Word processing 2.0, 3.0

Word processing 1.0 – 3.0

Word processing

Word processing 1.0

Word processing 1.02

Word processing 1.0

Word processing 5.2 – 9.0

Word processing 2013 - 2016

Total Word

Wang IWP

WordMarc Composer

WordMarc Composer+

Word processing 1.2

Word processing Through 2.6

Word processing

Word processing

WordMarc Word Processor Word processing

WordPerfect for DOS

WordPerfect for Macintosh

WordPerfect for Windows

Word processing 4.2

Word processing 1.02 - 3.1

Word processing 5.1 – X5

Wordstar 2000 for DOS

Wordstar for DOS

Wordstar for Windows

XyWrite

Word processing 1.0 - 3.0

Word processing 3.0 - 7.0

Word processing 1.0

Word processing Through III+

File Extension

.pfs

.jw

.sam

.sam

.def

.spr

.sdw

.iwp

.wpd

.wpd

.wpd

.wsd

(none defined)

.ws1

.xy

13 Workspaces

In Relativity, a workspace provides a secure data repository for documents used in cases or for applications developed with Dynamic Objects. You can store all types of documents (such as productions, witness testimony, and so on) in a workspace to facilitate searching, organizing, and categorizing content. In addition, you can use granular security settings to grant or deny permissions to specific content stored in the workspace.

At the workspace level, you can also define views, layouts, fields, and choices. These Relativity features streamline workflows, as well as simplify the processes for organizing and categorizing content. Views support filtering on item lists, while layouts, fields, and choices are used for categorizing documents.

Relativity | User Guide - 127

n

Adding workspaces to a client domain on page 130

Also see this related recipe: n

Multi-matter workspace setup in Relativity n n

Client - the name of this workspace's client object. Click to select a client. When you select a client you are making this workspace a child object of that client object. The Select Client pop-up displays a list of clients based on the conditions set in the ClientsOnPicker view.

Resource Pool - a set of servers and file repositories that you can associate with a workspace. Contact your system admin for information about available resource pools. Your selected resource pool

Relativity | User Guide - 128

determines the file repositories and SQL Servers available in the drop-down menus. See Resource pools for configuration information.

13.0.1 Relativity Downloads

In the Relativity Downloads section, click any link to download the corresponding component.

n n n

Viewer Installation Kit - download a standalone utility containing executable files used to install the viewer software.

Relativity Desktop Client 32-bit - displays a pop-up for saving or running this utility.

Relativity Desktop Client 64-bit - displays a pop-up for saving or running this utility.

Note: To use these buttons, you must have the security permission for the Admin Operation called Download

Relativity Desktop Client.

13.0.2 Re-run Event Handlers

The console includes the following button for rerunning event handlers: n

Re-run Event Handlers - executes Post Workspace Create event handlers that failed to complete properly. The Workspace Details page displays this button and an error message at the top of the page only when Post Workspace Create event handlers have failed. If the Post Workspace Create event handlers continue to fail, contact Client Services team ([email protected]).

Note: For additional information, see Post Workspace Create event handlers on the Relativity 9.5 Developers site.

Note: You must have permissions to the documents included in a production to remove production restrictions.

Relativity | User Guide - 129

13.1 Workspace admin group

A system admin can assign any group in Relativity to have full admin rights over a particular workspace. A workspace admin has full control over all objects within the workspace, but members of the group do not have the script permissions available only to system admins.

Use the following steps to set a designate a workspace admin group:

1. Click Edit on the Workspace Details tab.

2. Click in the Workspace Admin Group field.

3. Click the radio button next to the group you want to set as the workspace admin group.

4. Click Ok.

Note: You can only designate one group per workspace as a workspace admin group.

13.2 Adding workspaces to a client domain

You can add or remove objects from client domains if you have the client domains feature activated.

Note: This feature was formerly referred to as multi-tenancy in versions of Relativity previous to

9.5.162.111.

Note: Migrating a workspace that contains published data to a resource pool associated with a different worker manager server results in the loss of all references to previously published data.

Note: Once you add a workspace to a client domain, you can't remove it from the client domain.

Use the following steps to add a workspace to a client domain:

1. Navigate to the Workspace Details tab.

2. Click Edit.

3. Click next to the Client Name field in the Workspace Information section of the Workspace

Details tab.

4. Select the client with client domains enabled from the list.

5. A warning message requires you to confirm your decision by clicking Save.

6. Click Save.

7. You must select a new Matter, Resource Pool, Default File Repository, and Default Cache Location for the workspace once you move it into a client domain.

Note: Any groups that are part of a template workspace will also be a part of the client domain workspace.

These non client domain groups should be removed to prevent the client domain admin from seeing information on non-client domain users and groups.

Relativity | User Guide - 130

13.3 Workspace navigation

The workspace has several key areas that are important to understand as a Relativity user.

Also see this related recipe:

13.3.1 Browser panel

The browser is located on the left side of the workspace. Depending on your permissions, you may not see the browser. If you don't have a browser in your workspace, you can skip this section.

If you can see the browser, it contains at least three of the following options for browsing through your documents: n n n n

Folders

Field Tree

Saved Searches

Clusters

No matter which of these options you use, there are several display options you can use to customize your workspace.

The browser opens by default. Hide or show the browser by using the arrow icon in the upper left of the browser. Clicking closes the browser. Reopen the browser by clicking . You can also resize the browser by hovering over the line separating the panel from the other panel or item list until the line is highlighted. You may then click and drag the line to the desired dimensions.

Relativity | User Guide - 131

13.3.1.1 Browser options

The browser menu is located directly below the browser. Click on one of the menu’s options to display that mode of the browser:

Icon Name

Folder browser

Description

Navigate the folder hierarchy for your workspace

Field Tree browser Browse your documents according to how they were coded or grouped

Saved Searches browser Create a new search, or browse previously saved searches.See Saved

Search in the Searching Guide.

Clusters browser Browse your workspace clusters, which are groupings of conceptually correlated documents.

You must have Relativity Analytics to use the cluster browser and define clusters in your workspace. See the Analytics Guide.

Folder browser

Clicking on the folder icon allows you to navigate the folder hierarchy for your workspace. The folder structure is set when documents are imported. It can be based on the document’s source, or according to a folder structure set by your Relativity administrator. Clicking on a folder displays that folder’s documents in the item list.

A folder often has multiple subfolders. You can view the subfolders with the expand (+) button to the left of the desired folder. Once the subfolders expand, you can use the collapse (-) button to collapse them back into their root folder.

To change the folder scope (Only this folder or This folder and subfolders), click the orange folder icon in the Folder browser, and then select either This folder and subfolders or Only this folder from the drop-down list.

Field tree browser

Clicking on the field tree icon displays the field tree in the browser. Selected single- and multiplechoice list fields and their choices appear in a tree structure.

Relativity | User Guide - 132

Each single and multiple-choice field has its own choice folder in the field tree. The field’s choices appear as subfolders. Each field also has a [Not Set] choice, which displays null values for the field.

You can click on a choice in the field tree to display all the documents in the item list manager that have the selected choice value AND meet the criteria of the active view. In the item list, click this icon to send a link to the documents currently displayed in it.

Sending email links to choices

You can send an email message with a link to a choice, a choice folder, or the item list that appears when the field tree browser is open. In the field tree browser, right-click on a choice (or a choice folder) to display the E-mail Link option. Click this option on a choice to open an email message containing a link to it.

The subject line of the email message pre-populates with the following text: "Relativity Review -

Relativity | User Guide - 133

<Workspace Name> - <Choice Name: Value>." When the recipient clicks on the link, the documents associated with the choice appear in the item list manager. Relativity displays a permissions denied message if the recipient clicks the link but doesn't have access rights on the field associated with the choice.

Note: If you send an email link to a choice folder, the subject line displays the folder name instead of the choice name and the value. The item list manager displays all documents associated with the choices in the folder. Recipients must have access rights to fields associated with the choice folder.

13.3.2 View bar

The view bar consists of the following elements: n n

Show current path icon (  ) - allows you to view the current folder browser location for the displayed document list.

Views drop-down menu - allows you to select a view.

n n n n n o

Edit view icon

- allows you to edit a view that displays within the view drop-down menu. This will only be present if you have permission to edit the view. If it's not present, contact your

Relativity administrator to edit the current view.

o

Create view icon

- allows you to create a new view from within the view drop-down menu.

This will only be present if you have permission to add a new view. If it is not present, contact your Relativity administrator to add a view.

Include Related Items drop-down menu - returns documents related to the documents currently in the view. The options vary by workspace, but may include email family groups, duplicates, or similar documents. Learn more about related items in the

Related items pane on page 100

section of this document.

Add Widget - add a custom widget to your document list dashboard (e.g., pivot chart, list, grid, or cluster visualization).

Dashboard drop-down - select a custom dashboard to view in your document list. See Dashboards in the Navigation section of the Admin Guide for more information.

Export drop-down button - you can select export your dashboard widgets to an editable Excel document. See Dashboards in the Admin Guide for more information.

Sampling button ( ) - If you have proper permissions, clicking the Sampling button lets you create random sample sets from the document list using three different methodologies from the popup menu that appears.

For more information, see the Views chapter of the Admin guide.

Note: The drop-down menu that determined the folder scope has been removed from the view bar and repositioned in the folder browser. To use this new control, see

Changing folder scope

.

Relativity | User Guide - 134

13.3.3 Item list

The item list manager consists of the item list as well as navigational and other controls for working with the list of items.

Icon

Reset column sizes

Show / Hide Filters

Clear Filters

Turn Grid Style On / Off

Description

To return to the original settings for the columns, click the Reset

Column Sizes icon.

Click the blue icon to show filters for columns in the item list. Click the orange icon to hide them.

Click this icon to clear any filters that have been applied to the item list.

Click the blue icon to turn grid style on. This shrinks the row padding and alternates row shading to make your data more compact and easier to read. Click the orange icon to turn grid style off.

Use these navigational controls to navigate the pages in the item list.

The fields that appear in the item list are based on the selected view, which is editable. Contact your

Relativity administrator to change the fields in your view.

To change a column’s size, hover over the white line at the edge of the column header. A double arrow appears, indicating that you can move the column. Drag it in either direction to adjust the column width. The other columns on the page automatically adjust to fill the rest of the window.

Column data can be cut off. If you wish to return to the original settings click the Reset Column Sizes icon .

13.3.3.1 Saving a search from the Documents tab

You can save the conditions you've currently set up for the item list as a new search using the Save

as Search

icon located next to the mass operations bar at the bottom of the item list.

Relativity | User Guide - 135

13.3.3.2 Previewing a document

Note that if you hover your mouse pointer over a record’s file icon, you can click to open a pop-up viewer showing the record.

Note: If your item list doesn’t contain the file icon, contact your Relativity administrator to add it.

13.3.3.3 Sorting

You can use any field in the view to sort the entire searching set – the number of documents indicated in the bottom right.

Click any field heading once to sort the documents in that field in ascending order, alphabetically. A down arrow appears next to the heading name, as in the Reviewer field below. Click a second time to sort the documents in descending order, alphabetically. An up arrow appears. Clicking the field name a third time clears the sort and returns the field to its original order.

If you're not able to sort a particular field, contact your administrator to make sure the field has the

Sort option set to Yes.

13.3.4 Document set information bar

If you are using the new UI, the document set information bar no longer displays the bottom of your screen. In the new user interface, you can now browse your entire returned document set using the item list or the core reviewer interface without having to incrementally add more documents. The maximum number of documents you can load in the core reviewer interface can be changed using the FluidReviewQueueSize instance setting.

Relativity | User Guide - 136

Proprietary Rights

This documentation (“Documentation”) and the software to which it relates (“Software”) belongs to kCura LLC and/or kCura’s third party software vendors. kCura grants written license agreements which contain restrictions. All parties accessing the Documentation or Software must: respect proprietary rights of kCura and third parties; comply with your organization’s license agreement, including but not limited to license restrictions on use, copying, modifications, reverse engineering, and derivative products; and refrain from any misuse or misappropriation of this Documentation or

Software in whole or in part. The Software and Documentation is protected by the Copyright Act of

1976, as amended, and the Software code is protected by the Illinois Trade Secrets Act. Violations can involve substantial civil liabilities, exemplary damages, and criminal penalties, including fines and possible imprisonment.

©2017. kCura LLC. All rights reserved. Relativity® and kCura® are registered trademarks of kCura

LLC.

Relativity | User Guide - 137

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