Latin Pc Name for Downloading Files Directory Fonts/Lm
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latin pc name for downloading files Directory fonts/lm. Download the contents of this package in one zip archive (17.8M). lm – Latin modern fonts in outline formats. The Latin Modern family of fonts consists of 72 text fonts and 20 mathematics fonts, and is based on the Computer Modern fonts released into public domain by AMS (copyright © 1997 AMS). The lm font set contains a lot of additional characters, mainly accented ones, but not exclusively. There is one set of fonts, available both in Adobe Type 1 format (*.pfb) and in OpenType format (*.otf). There are five sets of T e X Font Metric files, corresponding to: Cork encoding (cork-*.tfm); QX encoding (qx-*.tfm); T e X ’n’ANSI aka LY1 encoding (texnansi-*.tfm); T5 (Vietnamese) encoding (t5-*.tfm); and Text Companion for EC fonts aka TS1 (ts1-*.tfm). Student Datafile. Review the following updates with your IT/operations staff and/or student information system vendor to see if your institution needs to take additional steps to be ready to interpret the student datafile in July: New Irregularity Code Valid Values —New code values have been added for indicating delayed or canceled scores. These include 07, 08, 09, 12, 13, 16, 17, 18, and 19. Please refer to the layout specification linked below for full descriptions. Note that there is no change to the layout of the file, only the addition of new valid values. The Student Datafile contains score report data for each AP student at your school or district who tested during the selected exam administration. This is not a report that can be viewed on your browser; rather, it is a CSV file that can be downloaded for use in other systems or applications. This file is available for the five most recent exam administrations. Student Datafile Layout. To guide you in understanding and processing the data in the file, review the following resources: 2021 AP Student Datafile Layout. Effective July 27, 2021. PDF 266.87 KB. Downloading and Opening. The following steps will guide you through the process of downloading the Student Datafile to your computer and opening it in MS Excel. Part 1: Downloading the File. From your Reports home page on the AP Score Reports for Educators website, click the Student Datafile report name under your Roster and Student Reports. A dialog box will pop up, prompting you to download the file. Click Export Report . A new tab will open. If your organization has a large number of students, the datafile may take some time to load. During this time the new tab will remain open as your file is being generated. Do not close this tab or request another export while this is loading. If you do not see the dialog box, make sure pop-up blockers are disabled on your browser. Note that some browsers such as Chrome and Firefox will automatically save to a folder you have designated previously. Check your browser settings to ensure the file will be saved to your preferred location. If you are using Safari on a Mac, note that your file may open as text in the browser window. Enter Command + S or select File > Save As . This opens up the export dialog. Change the format from Web Archive to Page Source and click on Save . Based on your browser settings you may be prompted to select the location on your computer where you would like to save the file. You may choose to rename your file if you wish, but make sure the .csv extension remains. Below the file name box, click the Save As Type drop-down box and select All Files . Click Save . Tip: We do not recommend using Internet Explorer 11 or a prior version as support for these versions are being phased out by Microsoft®. Part 2: Opening the Downloaded File in Microsoft Excel. The instructions below are for these Excel versions: Excel for Office 365, Excel 2019, Excel 2016, Excel 2013, Excel 2010 and Excel 2007. This process may vary for other versions of Excel. Method 1 (Recommended): Open Import Text Wizard. For the most flexibility in converting columns to different data formats, use the Import Text Wizard in Excel. This allows leading zeros to be preserved in your data. It also allows you to define the format of the data that may deviate from Excel’s default format. For example, date columns in the student datafile are MDY, but Excel’s default data format is YMD. Change the file name extension on your downloaded file from .csv to .txt before you open it in Excel. Open Excel on your computer and open your .txt file. The Import Text Wizard will run and will walk you through this process. Under Original Data Type , select the file type as Delimited and click Next . Under Delimiters , change the selection to Comma (Tab is the default and should be unchecked). Leave all the other options on this window as is and click Next. Under Data Preview , select all the columns. You can do this by holding the shift key down, dragging the slider all the way to the end, and selecting the last column. All columns and rows should then be darkened. Under Column Data Format , change the selection from General to Text . You can also select individual columns from the Data Preview section and change the format. For any date fields such as the Date of Birth column, you can individually select this column and change to date format MDY. Click Finish to view the Excel file. You should now be viewing your student datafile with the data divided into columns and rows. To retain this formatting choose to Save As an Excel worksheet. Note: Opening the file directly in Excel without changing the file extension to .txt is not recommended. When Excel opens a .csv file directly, it uses the current default data format settings to interpret how to interpret each column of data. Excel also does not change the format of the file—the name of the file retains the text file name extension (.csv). To have more flexibility in converting columns to different data formats, use the method above. Method 2: Import as External Data. Important: With this method, Excel may not convert some of the data to the right format and may drop leading zeros from number fields. For example, the date column in the Student Datafile is MDY, but Excel’s default data format is YMD. Latin pc name for downloading files. COL (Correcteur Orthographique de Latin) is a free tool providing assistance to check the spelling of a Latin text. Available for Microsoft Word, LibreOffice, OpenOffice.org and AbiWord, it includes a dictionary of about 400,000 Latin forms (classical and medieval Latin). To best match the different practices, COL is configurable: the user can select a particular spelling (how to represent diphthongs, vowels u and i. ). It works exactly like spellcheckers of other languages: when a word is not in the dictionary, it is underlined in red. This spellchecker is obviously not intended to be exhaustive, nor it wants to "normalize" the spelling of Latin. It was created primarily as an aid to save time and facilitate the work of all those who need to understand Latin texts (for the transcription of manuscripts, for example), but also to fix correct Latin texts scanned and processed by OCR, usually with many faults. In order to get in touch with our software, a good 'How To' written in Latin language can be read here. Note that the Latinists from the Vatican City are using our software since its early releases. Download the software. Thank you to take into account the following points, countless installation problems which are reported to us concern the points listed below: " SmartScreen " filters: even if the binaries are signed, you may have to confirm the SmartScreen warnings: Click on « Informations complémentaires » or « More Info » to confirm the installation. As of December 2020 it is possible to download a full package that embeds the lastest version of the Latin Spellchecker for all Microsoft Office versions for Microsoft Windows. This package includes an installer that will identify your version of Microsoft Office and therefore will suggest the installation of the right package. Despite of all, if you known for sure which version of Microsoft Office is installed on your computer, you still can download the right package below. If you don't know, please download the full package. Download COL 2016 (Verba) - for Microsoft Office 2016, 2019 or 365 - 64-bit Download COL 2013 (Verba) - for Microsoft Office 2013 - 64-bit Download COL 2010 (Verba) - for Microsoft Office 2010 - 64-bit Download COL 2016 (Verba) - for Microsoft Office 2016, 2019 or 365 - 32-bit Download COL 2013 (Verba) - for Microsoft Office 2013 - 32-bit Download COL 2010 (Verba) - for Microsoft Office 2010 - 32-bit Download COL 5.0 (Verba) - for Microsoft Word 2002 (XP), 2003 2007. For Microsoft Office 2011 and 2016 (MacOSX) See development web pages. History of the program. Since version COL 2.1.x, it is possible to choose between different spelling options for Latin words. The way Latin words are written depends indeed on local habits, choices made for a particular project, or the scholar's field of study. For instance, in medieval Latin, diphtongues of classical Latin (æ, œ) are replaced with a simple « e », but sometimes they are rendered by two distinct letters (« ae », « oe »). Likewise, some conventions impose to keep the letters j and v, whereas others impose to transcribe them as, respectively, i and u.