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Copying analyses (gates, statistics,
kinetics, cell cycle, etc.) from one sample to another is very easy:
simply click on the analysis (a gate, statistic, or population node),
and drag it to the destination. The node is added on to the destination
node as a "child" of the destination (i.e., it is applied
to only those cells which fall within the population you drop the
analysis on).
You can drag entire trees around this way, selecting
children, parents, or multiple nodes. There are specific rules for
how these are taken around when you drag; see the pages on dragging
and dropping.
Note that if you drag a subpopulation onto a population
which already has a subpopulation with the same name as that you
are copying, then FlowJo asks what you would like to do: you can
replace the existing subpopulation, you can retain the existing
subpopulation, or you can add the current subpopulation with a change
in its name. (The reason for all of this is that FlowJo does not
allow you to have two subpopulations with the same name at the same
level of analysis). These options are more fully described in the
pages on replacing nodes.
You can automate the process of applying analyses
to samples by using groups. You can add
analyses to a group; then every sample which belongs to the group
or is later added to the group gets those analyses. This is one
of the powerful batch analysis features of FlowJo. You may
view an example of group-based analysis.
You can drag analyses across workspaces; in other
words, you can drag an analysis node from one workspace and drop
it onto a sample or a group in a different workspace. You need to
have both workspace windows open to do this; simply drag from one
to the other.
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