When the quadrant tool is selected, and if you haven't unselected
the "quadrant statistics" preference in the preferences
dialog, then FlowJo will track a cross hair over the graph window.
It will also continuously update the frequencies of events within
each quadrant (these frequencies are the percentage of events falling
within each quadrant, with respect to the events that fall in the
current subset. Thus, the four frequencies add up to 100%).
The live quadrant statistics are shown ONLY while you track the
mouse. Once you click to select the quadrant position, FlowJo will
create four rectangular gates as subsets of the current population.
FlowJo names the gates according to the parameters and each quadrant
position. A quadrant gate is therefore named as "Q: parmX±
parmY±", where parmX and parmY are the X and Y parameters,
respectively, and "±" will reflect whether the
quadrant is the higher ("+") or lower ("-")
quadrant for that parameter. (If necessary, FlowJo may truncate
the names of the parameter stains such that the overall gate names
are not too long).
Once you have created the quadrant gates, each one behaves as a
separate subset gate. You can independently move any single quadrant
gate (note that then you will no longer necessarily cover all events
in the plot!). If you want to move all four quadrant gates together,
then shift-select each of the quadrants in the graph window. Now
you can move them to a new position. You may also click on
the central, shared vertex of quadrants to move all four simultaneously.
When you have quadrant gates on a graph, they cover the entire
area of the graph at all times. This means that other gates may
be "below" these gates. To select other gates, press the
command-key while clicking in an area of the graph: this will select
the next gate in the same area of the mouse.
To get quadrant statistics, simply add the appropriate statistic
to each of the quadrants. For instance, you could select the first
quadrant in the workspace window, and add the "Frequency of
parent" statistic to get the representation of that quadrant
in the parent population. Then click-and-drag this statistic to
each of the other four quadrants. (Or, select all four nodes
before adding the statistic).