# MSFS Pop Out Panel Manager MSFS Pop Out Panel Manager is an utility application for MSFS 2020 which help to save and position pop out panels such as PDF and MFD to be used by applications such as Sim Innovations Air Manager's overlay. This is a proof of concept application since I do not use Air Manager. I kept seeing people want an application like this in flightsimulator.com so I just create it. I welcome feedback and help to improve the accuracy and usefulness of this utility. ## Pop Out Panel annoyance In MSFS, by holding **Right-Alt** + **Left Clicking** selected instrumentation panels, these panels will pop out as floating windows that can be moved to a different monitor. Predefined toolbar menu windows such as ATC, Checklist, VFR Map, etc can also be popped out. For the MSFS predefined toolbar menu windows, they are easier to save and reposition in the each start of a flight using 3rd party windows position utility because these windows have a **title** for the pop out window. But panels such as PFD and MFD on G1000 or the FMS panel on G3000 do not have windows title. This makes remember there last used position more difficult and very annoying to resize and readjust their positions on every flight to be used by Air Manager. ## Concept The concept to determine the untitled panels is pretty simple: - User will pop out the untitled panel - This utility will take a screenshot of each panel - The screenshot image will be fed into OCR using [Tesseract](https://github.com/charlesw/tesseract/) - The OCR text (mostly 'gibberish') will be compared to a predefined set of keyword text that is defined by the user. These comparison text can be customized and additional panel type and profile can be added by the user for more plane configuration. - By being able to identify the untitled panel, this solves the problem of not able to easily reposition these panel in subsequent flight. ## Workflow : 1. User pops out the untitled panels such as MFD or PFD on G1000 2. User selects **Analyze** for the types of panel just got popped out 3. User positions these panels in addition to any predefined toolbar menu windows to their liking 4. User saves the position 5. In next flight, user pops out the untitled panels 6. User selects Analyze 7. The windows will reposition themselves to their saved position. In addition, - Profiles can be added for each plane configuration - Customizable which focuses on touch inputs to make your flying more enjoyable! It is designed for an iPad and Android tablet plus Arduino's input controls in mind to provide a simple DIY cockpit for all the casual sim fans out there. This application can also be used in any modern browser on PC or tablet with all features enabled. The initial release includes features such as: # Files StackEdit stores your files in your browser, which means all your files are automatically saved locally and are accessible **offline!** ## Create files and folders The file explorer is accessible using the button in left corner of the navigation bar. You can create a new file by clicking the **New file** button in the file explorer. You can also create folders by clicking the **New folder** button. ## Switch to another file All your files and folders are presented as a tree in the file explorer. You can switch from one to another by clicking a file in the tree. ## Rename a file You can rename the current file by clicking the file name in the navigation bar or by clicking the **Rename** button in the file explorer. ## Delete a file You can delete the current file by clicking the **Remove** button in the file explorer. The file will be moved into the **Trash** folder and automatically deleted after 7 days of inactivity. ## Export a file You can export the current file by clicking **Export to disk** in the menu. You can choose to export the file as plain Markdown, as HTML using a Handlebars template or as a PDF. # Synchronization Synchronization is one of the biggest features of StackEdit. It enables you to synchronize any file in your workspace with other files stored in your **Google Drive**, your **Dropbox** and your **GitHub** accounts. This allows you to keep writing on other devices, collaborate with people you share the file with, integrate easily into your workflow... The synchronization mechanism takes place every minute in the background, downloading, merging, and uploading file modifications. There are two types of synchronization and they can complement each other: - The workspace synchronization will sync all your files, folders and settings automatically. This will allow you to fetch your workspace on any other device. > To start syncing your workspace, just sign in with Google in the menu. - The file synchronization will keep one file of the workspace synced with one or multiple files in **Google Drive**, **Dropbox** or **GitHub**. > Before starting to sync files, you must link an account in the **Synchronize** sub-menu. ## Open a file You can open a file from **Google Drive**, **Dropbox** or **GitHub** by opening the **Synchronize** sub-menu and clicking **Open from**. Once opened in the workspace, any modification in the file will be automatically synced. ## Save a file You can save any file of the workspace to **Google Drive**, **Dropbox** or **GitHub** by opening the **Synchronize** sub-menu and clicking **Save on**. Even if a file in the workspace is already synced, you can save it to another location. StackEdit can sync one file with multiple locations and accounts. ## Synchronize a file Once your file is linked to a synchronized location, StackEdit will periodically synchronize it by downloading/uploading any modification. A merge will be performed if necessary and conflicts will be resolved. If you just have modified your file and you want to force syncing, click the **Synchronize now** button in the navigation bar. > **Note:** The **Synchronize now** button is disabled if you have no file to synchronize. ## Manage file synchronization Since one file can be synced with multiple locations, you can list and manage synchronized locations by clicking **File synchronization** in the **Synchronize** sub-menu. This allows you to list and remove synchronized locations that are linked to your file. # Publication Publishing in StackEdit makes it simple for you to publish online your files. Once you're happy with a file, you can publish it to different hosting platforms like **Blogger**, **Dropbox**, **Gist**, **GitHub**, **Google Drive**, **WordPress** and **Zendesk**. With [Handlebars templates](http://handlebarsjs.com/), you have full control over what you export. > Before starting to publish, you must link an account in the **Publish** sub-menu. ## Publish a File You can publish your file by opening the **Publish** sub-menu and by clicking **Publish to**. For some locations, you can choose between the following formats: - Markdown: publish the Markdown text on a website that can interpret it (**GitHub** for instance), - HTML: publish the file converted to HTML via a Handlebars template (on a blog for example). ## Update a publication After publishing, StackEdit keeps your file linked to that publication which makes it easy for you to re-publish it. Once you have modified your file and you want to update your publication, click on the **Publish now** button in the navigation bar. > **Note:** The **Publish now** button is disabled if your file has not been published yet. ## Manage file publication Since one file can be published to multiple locations, you can list and manage publish locations by clicking **File publication** in the **Publish** sub-menu. This allows you to list and remove publication locations that are linked to your file. # Markdown extensions StackEdit extends the standard Markdown syntax by adding extra **Markdown extensions**, providing you with some nice features. > **ProTip:** You can disable any **Markdown extension** in the **File properties** dialog. ## SmartyPants SmartyPants converts ASCII punctuation characters into "smart" typographic punctuation HTML entities. For example: | |ASCII |HTML | |----------------|-------------------------------|-----------------------------| |Single backticks|`'Isn't this fun?'` |'Isn't this fun?' | |Quotes |`"Isn't this fun?"` |"Isn't this fun?" | |Dashes |`-- is en-dash, --- is em-dash`|-- is en-dash, --- is em-dash| ## KaTeX You can render LaTeX mathematical expressions using [KaTeX](https://khan.github.io/KaTeX/): The *Gamma function* satisfying $\Gamma(n) = (n-1)!\quad\forall n\in\mathbb N$ is via the Euler integral $$ \Gamma(z) = \int_0^\infty t^{z-1}e^{-t}dt\,. $$ > You can find more information about **LaTeX** mathematical expressions [here](http://meta.math.stackexchange.com/questions/5020/mathjax-basic-tutorial-and-quick-reference). ## UML diagrams You can render UML diagrams using [Mermaid](https://mermaidjs.github.io/). For example, this will produce a sequence diagram: ```mermaid sequenceDiagram Alice ->> Bob: Hello Bob, how are you? Bob-->>John: How about you John? Bob--x Alice: I am good thanks! Bob-x John: I am good thanks! Note right of John: Bob thinks a long
long time, so long
that the text does
not fit on a row. Bob-->Alice: Checking with John... Alice->John: Yes... John, how are you? ``` And this will produce a flow chart: ```mermaid graph LR A[Square Rect] -- Link text --> B((Circle)) A --> C(Round Rect) B --> D{Rhombus} C --> D ```