Selecting an Event
After importing data, the first step before inspecting or processing is to identify which event you want to work with. All processing commands operate on one event at a time.
Listing events
The table shows each event's ID, time, and location. IDs are displayed in their shortest unambiguous form — use any unique prefix when passing an ID to other commands.
Events are listed in the Project tab under Events.
Events are listed in the Project tab.
Selecting an Event for the CLI and Shell
Most processing commands (like aimbat align iccs or aimbat snapshot create)
operate on a single event. You can specify the target event in two ways:
1. Positional argument
Pass the ID directly as the first argument. You can use the full UUID or any unique prefix:
The named forms --event and --event-id are also accepted and behave
identically:
2. The DEFAULT_EVENT_ID environment variable
If you are working on the same event for multiple commands, set the
DEFAULT_EVENT_ID environment variable in your shell. AIMBAT uses it
whenever no explicit ID is provided:
The shell prompt also reflects this ID when set. To clear it, unset the
variable: unset DEFAULT_EVENT_ID.
Note
DEFAULT_EVENT_ID is a plain shell environment variable consumed directly
by the CLI argument parser. It is not an AIMBAT setting: it has no
AIMBAT_ prefix, cannot be set in .env, and does not appear in
aimbat settings list.
Selecting an event for processing (TUI / GUI)
The TUI and GUI maintain their own event selection independently of the CLI / shell context — changing it here does not affect what the CLI uses, and vice versa.
Two ways to select an event:
- Press
eto open the event switcher, navigate withj/k, and pressEnterto select. - In the Project tab, navigate to the Events table, press
Enteron a row, and choose Select event.
The selected event is shown in the event bar at the top of the screen
and marked with ▶ in both the switcher and the events table.
Select an event in the Project tab. The selection is reflected across the Event, Snapshots, and Processing tabs.