[[discover-document-context]] == View surrounding documents Once you've narrowed your search to a specific event in *Discover*, you can inspect the documents that occurred immediately before and after the event. To view the surrounding documents, your index pattern must contain time-based events. . In the document table, click the expand icon (>). . Click *View surrounding documents.* + In the context view, documents are sorted by the time field specified in the index pattern and displayed using the same set of columns as the *Discover* view from which the context was opened. The anchor document is highlighted in blue. + [role="screenshot"] image::images/discover-context.png[Image showing context view feature, with anchor documents highlighted in blue] + The filters you applied in *Discover* are carried over to the context view. Pinned filters remain active, while normal filters are copied in a disabled state. + [role="screenshot"] image::images/discover-context-filters-inactive.png[Filter in context view] . To find the documents of interest, add filters. . To increase the number of documents that surround the anchor document, click *Load*. By default, five documents are added with each click. + [role="screenshot"] image::images/discover-context-load-newer-documents.png[Load button and the number of documents to load] [float] [[configure-context-ContextView]] === Configure the context view Configure the appearance and behavior in *Advanced Settings*. . Open the main menu, then click *Stack Management > Advanced Settings*. . Search for `context`, then edit the settings. + [horizontal] `context:defaultSize`:: The number of documents to display by default. `context:step`:: The default number of documents to load with each button click. The default is 5. `context:tieBreakerFields`:: The field to use for tiebreaking in case of equal time field values. The default is the `_doc` field. + You can enter a comma-separated list of field names, which is checked in sequence for suitability when a context is displayed. The first suitable field is used as the tiebreaking field. A field is suitable if the field exists and is sortable in the index pattern the context is based on. + Although not required, it is recommended to only use fields that have {ref}/doc-values.html[doc values] enabled to achieve good performance and avoid unnecessary {ref}/modules-fielddata.html[field data] usage. Common examples for suitable fields include log line numbers, monotonically increasing counters and high-precision timestamps.