However, I tried putting the same Feature Layer on a blank map to test, and was able to configure the form and it would do Conditional Visibilities, and a simple Calculated Expression for area from use Length and Width populated correctly. It may have been an issue with the original Web Map? We've been transitioning some older maps from Map Viewer Classic to the Map Viewer, and this map may have been copied from Classic and saved as a new map viewer - and may have carried with it some bugs potentially. Not sure. I will configure some more of the form and see if the issue is resolved.
Summary: AliView is an alignment viewer and editor designed to meet the requirements of next-generation sequencing era phylogenetic datasets. AliView handles alignments of unlimited size in the formats most commonly used, i.e. FASTA, Phylip, Nexus, Clustal and MSF. The intuitive graphical interface makes it easy to inspect, sort, delete, merge and realign sequences as part of the manual filtering process of large datasets. AliView also works as an easy-to-use alignment editor for small as well as large datasets.
While following along with a tutorial, the viewer node eventually stopped updating to reflect changes. I figured I made a large mistake and eventually deleted every node and completely started over. For whatever reason though, the viewer node now shows absolutely nothing no matter what I try. Does anyone know the potential mistake I made or is this a bug?
I would like to add that the backdrop does work properly on the compositing window.
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Currently on the Team plan with 20 users, of which only 2 need edit permissions.
Only way to have 18 viewers and 2 editors would be to pay 5x more per month (essentially I now have to make an argument why we need to pay considerably more for some users to be able to do less).
Want to add the rest of the company over the next few months, probably another 100 or so people. Still only 2 editors though, no way can I justify the price hike.
Not a bad idea @bradlymathews except it limits the amount of "viewer" or "end" users in multiples of five. We hire one at a time, when we hit that 6 mark we have to pay for 5 more users rather than one? Seems much easier to just charge a flat fee for editors and a lower fee for end users.
This is a huge reason why we have not moved to Retool for more of our internal apps. I need to secure our applications while still making them publicly accessible. In order to do that, I have to pay for edit licensing for all users. We have 3-4 people that need that editing ability at this time. Outside of that, everyone should be a viewer. Licensing is very pricey for adding 350 end users and the on-prem version has an entry price that is not enticing either.
I am an XSLT designer, and I find it hard to type XPath expressions of nodes manually. Is there any XML editor or viewer which can give me XPath expressions that I can copy-paste? I want to put them in XSL files.
I've been looking for an open source PDF viewer and editor, and it's the editor part which becomes tricky. I've only found paid software that does it. So basically I'm looking for an open-source Adobe Acrobat alternative.
The viewer Section can not but you can as you know have one imbedded window and any number of floating viewer windows including an external one. Using Windows split screen and snapping makes these fairly easy to position and there were many 3rd party apps to control how screen division can be locked into profiles for multiple apps. but most of these were abandoned as windows 10 screen features improved.
In TeXStudio, the viewer windows is incorporated to the program window, but can be individualized and even, given to an application like Sumatra. I ignore if the new arrangement can be permanent, but TeXStudio can remember its window configuration, which could aleviate its repeated use.
While I'm sure better already exists, I felt like writing code in a new language (to me), so I knocked up a regedit-style SFS (save game) viewer/editor to help me find & fix a problem with one of my saves.
Those who wish to view, edit, or modify PDF files on their Windows PCs, or even make PDF documents searchable with OCR, now have a real alternative to Adobe Reader with PDF-XChange Editor, the FREE PDF viewer and editor.
The free PDF-XChange Editor enables users to also try the advanced features available in PDF-XChange Editor PRO in a free evaluation mode. No PDF viewer provides more features than PDF-XChange Editor, or does that without sacrificing performance or quality.
FastStone is free so I suggest you evaluate it before spending money on any other program. If you only shoot JPGs then it is probably the best free image viewer and editor for Windows. If you decide to stay with it I suggest you make a contribution to the authors to show your appreciation.
Edit: Having tried the below I am back with the standard Windows 10 viewer, it is modern, simple to use and has a few handy tools. The others are all too fully featured, not as well laid out and always lack one or more features I would like. Most are too old fashioned too with tiny click areas. I will stick with Windows Photos and Polarr when I need to edit one for now.
Photoscape- ruins image quality and not user friendly e.g. when an image is open in viewer when you click Edit it doesn't automatically appear there. Northrup needs a telling off for recommending this.
There are a lot of questions and answers regarding the best PDF viewer available with Ubuntu, but I want to parse the PDF file and know details of PDF, such as images, fonts and links that are available in a given PDF file.
The answer of "best" really depends on how much detail you want and on how stable you want the viewer to be. There exists many softwares for viewing and even editing post script and pdf files in linux; all which seem to have been removed from the current Ubuntu repositories (probably due to stability issues).
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