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A format essentially defines what you want to get out of a certain type of document. It defines the structure of the output and is very visible in the Data View of the Data Entry Companion.

Format is a structured collection of Fields of interest and consists of

  • Text fields: Pieces of information that appear literally in the document

  • Tag fields: Information that does not appear literally in the document, but that can be derived. Tags come from a finite set of options.

  • Rows: Text and Tag fields that logically belong together

Format consists of at least one table: Format table.

There can be as many additional tables as needed for information that follows a row/table logic.

 


Format Table

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The format table contains text and tag fields. These fields have a number of properties.

Property

Description

Default

Mandatory

You can indicate whether or not a field is mandatory. Mandatory fields will be marked as read when not found and will block submission if not filled

false

Field

The number of options is virtually unlimited. You can specify a data type other than string to reduce the number of options for a text field. For example, here you can specify that the text should be an amount

string

Annotation, tag, separator, computed

Indicates whether the field of interest is an annotation, a tag, a separator, or computed

Data type

Indicates whether this is a text field or a tag field

text field

Scope

Indicates whether the scope is a page, a section or a document

section

Visible

You can indicate if a field of interest is visible

true

Multiple

You can indicate if a field of interest can appear multiple times.

false

Conditional

Some fields of interest are only relevant depending on the value of other fields of interest. For example, you may only be interested in the VAT number of an invoice if if has been confirmed that the document is a valid invoice (valid_invoice field == true)

No condition (always show)

Display name

This is the label that will be shown in the FrontEnd to the user of the data entry companion and in the stats pane

No default, must be specified

Technical name

This is the label that will be used when communicating to servers

Same as display name

Description

A short text to characterise the field of interest


Other tables

You may want to maintain the row logic for tables in the extraction of information. To this end, we allow you to specify tables, which contain one or more row types.

For example: you may have a table of line items with four columns (description, unit price, quantity, line total). You would then have two types of rows for this table: line items and a total line. The total line would be of a different type as it will not have a unit price. It will have a fixed description ("total"), a quantity and an overall total.

Rows are essentially a sorted list of text and tag fields. In addition, they will have a row_type, which defines to which table they belong.


Edit Formats

Navigate to "Studio" > "Formats" to get an overview of the available formats. Click on edit format to have a view on the format. You'll see the format table and other tables for the format.

 

Edit Formats through the Studio Controls in the Data Entry Companion

 Format defines the fields you are interested in for a given document type. It is reflected in the data table that you can see in the Data Entry Companion. We have also made it possible for you to edit the format directly from within the Data Entry Companion.

To do this, you need to enable the Studio Controls from within the Data Entry Companion. You will recognise the Studio controls by the three dots icon.

 

Edit properties of fields

You can edit the properties of a field by clicking on the three dots in front of the row in the Fields table. For other tables, you can click on the three dots in the column headers to edit the properties

 

Add fields

You can add Text or Tag fields in two ways:

  1. By using the placeholder in the bottom of the format table

  2. By dragging a box around an area of interest and indicating that you want to create a new field

 

Visibility of fields

Revision of ‘visible flag’, ‘visible if condition’ and ‘mandatory flag’ properties of fields as specified in the format

  • ‘Visible flag’ and ‘visible if condition’

Visible

Visible if
(conditional)

Result

Explanation

TRUE

n/a (not set)

Visible

If no condition is set for visible_if, then the visible flag is used

FALSE

n/a (not set)

Not visible

TRUE

TRUE (evaluates to)

Visible

When configured, “visible_if” has a higher priority than “visible”

FALSE

TRUE (evaluates to)

Visible

TRUE

FALSE (evaluates to)

Not Visible

FALSE

FALSE (evaluates to)

Not visible

  • ‘Mandatory flag’

    • Mandatory field: Field can not be null (not specified, which means was not predicted), but can be an empty string. A mandatory field which is null is treated as an action

    • Not mandatory field: Field can be null. A non-mandatory field which is null is not treated as an action

    • Computed field is mandatory: computed field which evaluates to False is treated as an action

    • Computed field is not mandatory: computed field is not treated as an action