Getting around the editorThe editor is where you lay out your room and seat your guests. Here are the three areas you'll use most: the seats panel, the canvas, and the toolbar.
Add and edit tablesCreate rectangular and round tables, set their size and seat spacing, and read the live capacity readout so you know exactly how many guests each table holds.
Rows of seats and areasUse rows of seats for theater-style seating and benches, and areas to mark a stage, dance floor, or any zone on your floor plan that does not need seats.
Text, icons, images and rulersAdd text labels, icons, images, and measurement rulers to your floor plan to label rooms, mark entrances, drop in a venue photo, or check real-world distances.
Style tables and elementsChange label, background, and border colors, move an element's text around it, hide table text or seat names, and copy styling from one element to another in a click.
Move, align, resize and rotateDrag elements into place, select several at once, rotate with a handle, resize, and use the alignment toolbar to line everything up and space it evenly.
Snapping, guides and proximity distancesThe canvas shows alignment lines and gap distances while you drag, and a display settings menu where you turn these on or off and switch between cm and ft.
Layer elements (bring to front, send to back)Change which element sits on top when two overlap, so a text label stays readable over an area or a table stays visible above a rug graphic.
Copy, paste, duplicate and deleteCopy an element with Ctrl+C and Ctrl+V, duplicate it from the right-click menu, and delete elements with a confirmation step so you don't lose work by accident.
Lock elements in placeLock a table or ruler so it can't be moved, edited, or deleted by accident once you're happy with where it sits.
Undo/redo and how saving worksUndo and redo recent changes in the editor, and understand why you rarely need to press save: your work saves on its own as you edit.
Keyboard shortcutsEvery keyboard shortcut in the seating chart editor, from saving and undo to zoom, layering, and fullscreen, in one reference list.
Start from a layout templateArrange your tables into a common room layout, like a classroom, theater, or banquet setup, in one step instead of dragging each table into place yourself.