Filter response data

  1. Select all the questions that you want to filter from the left panel.

    Screenshot 2025-04-15 at 12.41.21 PM.png

  2. Click Filters on top of the screen.

    Screenshot 2025-04-15 at 1.01.42 PM.png

  3. Select the conditions you would like to use as filters. You can use multiple filters at the same time.

    Screenshot 2025-04-15 at 1.04.15 PM.png

  4. Click Apply. NB! The filters will be automatically applied to all data, including map responses.

    Screenshot 2025-04-15 at 1.04.33 PM.png

Remove a filter

  1. Click the Filters button on top of the screen and then delete the conditions you no longer want to use.
  2. Click Apply.


Spatial filters: Filtering by geographic area

You can now filter responses based on geographic areas, such as those who placed a point, line, or area, or who selected a map feature within a defined boundary.

  1. Toggle on the layers you want to filter by.

    Screenshot 2025-06-25 at 15.11.33.png
  2. Click the Filters button.

    Screenshot 2025-06-25 at 15.13.47.png

  3. In the left column, click Draw on the map.

    Screenshot 2025-06-25 at 15.05.35.png

  4. To start drawing, click on the map. Close the shape to finish. The drawn area does not have to be precise.

    Screenshot 2025-06-25 at 15.06.37.png

  5. Name the area you have drawn.

    Screenshot 2025-06-25 at 15.07.57.png

Once applied, the map will display only responses within that designated area, and all charts will automatically update to reflect data from respondents whose entries intersect that geographic boundary. For example, if you want to analyze responses only from people living in the city center, you can draw a rough outline of that area, and your charts will then show only responses that fall within it. You can repeat this process to create multiple spatial filters.

Tip! Using conditions to compare how different groups answered? Make this more efficient by saving each filtered view.

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