This free online file converter lets you convert media easy and fast from one format to another. We support a lot of different source formats, just try. If you can't find the conversion you need, please let us know and write us an e-mail. We probably can help you...
--dc--adobecom.hlx.page/dc-shared/assets/images/frictionless/how-to-images/convert-pdf-how-to.svg Three files and an Adobe Acrobat PDF displaying the process our PDF converter uses for free PDF conversions to and from any documents.
--dc--adobecom.hlx.page/dc-shared/assets/images/shared-images/frictionless/seo-icons/reuse-files.svg A stack of files with a circular arrow showing files that you can reuse content when you convert to and from PDF
The Acrobat PDF converter lets you export PDF files to the following file types: DOCX, XLSX, PPTX, JPEG, JPG, PNG, and TIFF. Simply drag and drop or upload a PDF into the tool drop zone to convert your file. The tool also lets you convert these file formats to PDF using any web browser: DOCX, DOC, XLSX, XLS, PPTX, PPT, TEXT, TXT, RTF, BMP, GIF, JPEG, JPG, PNG, TIFF, and TIF.
You can also try Adobe Acrobat Pro for free for seven days to convert HTML to PDF documents, edit PDF files, edit scans with OCR, annotate files, merge PDFs, split PDFs, reduce file size, and set file permissions.
I am trying to add a table to my content as a hosted layer. It is an excel table that has a column with numeric values stored as text. I did check to make sure that it was a text/string field. AGOL automatically converts the field to 'integer' and I can't find a way to convert it back to string, which I have to do because I want to join the table to a layer using this field. I tried bringing it into arcgis pro first, and arcgis pro recognized it as a string field so I didn't go any further with that idea. I ended up adding a new string field in agol, and copying over the data (i had to do some calculations to add a 0 in front, etc.). But i'm wondering if there is an easier/more straightforward way.
My understanding is that ArcGIS automatically determines field type for Excel (.xls) fields based on entries in the column. The workaround here is to save the Excel workbook as a .csv file, the add as an item to ArcGIS Online. When you add the .csv you will be able to specify the field type as string when uploading.
Actually, when I added to my ArcGis Pro map, it was listed as string. My problem occurred when I added it to ArcGIS online. That's what I thought was strange. But, I will keep your workaround in mind for the next time. (It would be great if this could be fixed so that one could specify field type when bringing in from excel as well, or at least respecting the field types already designated in excel) Thanks!
I'm having the exact same issue. I have an Excel file that has 2 columns which in Excel read as integer but I need them to be text. I've converted them to a text column and chosen to "ignore error" in Excel so that when I export them to csv or another file type (even Excel) I can use them in a different system and the columns are read as text data type. BUT when I upload them to AGO they are converted back to integer. This has made it impossible to use the join and hosted feature class view option for updating my data through AGO. I had to go back to using desktop tools for doing the join and exporting the data. I'm working at an agency that hasn't yet moved to ArcGIS Pro so it's ArcMap for me. Also when I bring the Excel file into ArcMap it's no problem. The converted columns read as text. This is a big problem!
I'm wondering if there is a workaround like this when importing Google Sheets? When I go to import a Sheet from my Google Drive I am not presented with the option to change the field types. Currently I have a ZIP code field I need to bring into AGOL as a string but every time I import it converts it to an integer. I tried specifying in the sheet beforehand that it is a string but no luck.
Hi Sam, I am having exactly the same problem. I just tried going into my GSheet and publishing it to the web (File > Publish to Web...) as a .csv and then adding to my AGOL map directly from the URL, hoping that might solve the problem. (See this article: -blog/products/arcgis-online/data-management/using-google-docs-in-your-ar...) Nope - still brought the field in as an integer rather than string, and you can't change the field type that AGOL automatically assigns.
Please let me know if you find a solution to this. I have a case in with ESRI Support. Will keep you posted if I find a solution. Seems like this would be a very common issue that AGOL should be able to handle!
I was able to partially solve my problem using the Publish Google Sheet to the web as a .csv and add layer from the web in AGOL (following instructions in the link I gave above): In the Google sheet, I inserted a few dummy rows at the top of the sheet and entered text in the relevant field. Because AGOL automatically chooses the field data type based on the first 5 or 10 rows of data, it sees this as a text/string field. This worked for me but of course then you have one or more rows of irrelevant dummy data.
I am working with U.S. County data and the field in question is the FIPS code. I have tried to add my .csv as a non-location-based table and also as a location-based dataset using FIPS as a County Location field. In both cases, the dialog box includes a message saying "Note: Features will not update if referenced CSV changes." So there is also that problem if you are hoping to use live data in your .csv that will be updated in your AGOL map.
Hi @VanessaGoold & @SamSimpson - if you share your Google Sheets with the Google user pkli...@esri.com I'm happy to take a look. Since there is an active support case that the analyst is working on I'll post the result of that here as well.
It sounds like there are two central issues here 1) we need to be able to specify the field data type when adding data from Google Sheets without inserting dummy data near the top of the columns (probably an enhancement request) and 2) we need to figure out why the specific CSV mentioned above is preventing data updates when the source CSV changes. Does this sound like a good characterization of where we're at with these issues at the present moment?
Please note: All tools on this page are based on the date & time settings of your computer and use JavaScript to convert times. Some browsers use the current DST (Daylight Saving Time) rules for all dates in history. JavaScript does not support leap seconds.
Our PDF file converter does more than convert files to PDF. From compression and rotation to merging two different PDFs and splitting one PDF into two, you can easily edit your PDF files with our suite of tools in the blink of an eye.
The unix time stamp is a way to track time as a running total of seconds. This count starts at the Unix Epoch on January 1st, 1970 at UTC. Therefore, the unix time stamp is merely the number of seconds between a particular date and the Unix Epoch. It should also be pointed out (thanks to the comments from visitors to this site) that this point in time technically does not change no matter where you are located on the globe. This is very useful to computer systems for tracking and sorting dated information in dynamic and distributed applications both online and client side.
On this date the Unix Time Stamp will cease to work due to a 32-bit overflow. Before this moment millions of applications will need to either adopt a new convention for time stamps or be migrated to 64-bit systems which will buy the time stamp a "bit" more time.
A PDF is essentially a snapshot of a document file. Unlike other document formats (such as DOC), PDF files look the same on any system, regardless of screen size, installed fonts, or even the operating system. This makes PDFs very versatile because you know they will always look great no matter where they show up.
A PNG is an image file, not a document. Image files work all across the web, smartphones, laptops, and even TVs, making them equally as versatile as PDFs. However, PDFs can have multiple pages whereas PNGs cannot. PNGs can also be uploaded to places PDFs are not supported, such as social networks. This makes PNGs and PDFs quite different.
On this page, we have a tool that can convert any PDF to a PNG. It can convert a one-page PDF to one PNG or convert each page of a multi-page PDF to multiple PNGs. The process is similar for both situations.
When you upload a file to our server, your original file remains untouched. We make a copy of your file and then use that for the conversion. So you never need to worry about your original file. It is safe on your computer!
Automatically generate different link styles with the cover and QR codes to quickly share the flip book by email, social media, and everywhere else. Choose the embed style that best matches your website and start publishing flipbooks easily.
The PDF can have any page size A4, A5, portrait, landscape, and non-standard sizes. The converted flip book will resize according to the device. They look great on mobile phones, tablets both in android, iOS, and all the desktop browsers.
After the conversion, you can customize the publication, changing the logo, background, text, navigation control styles, and much more. You can make the flipbook look the way you want quickly and easily.
Discover how many visits your flipbooks have, where your readers come from, the links and media they click, and the flipbook pages they find more interesting. Analyze your visits to learn and improve your content. Learn more
Your content is private by default, we never share it without your consent. For more security you can also protect your flipbooks with user name and password. You can even restrict where your flipbooks can be embedded.
Download the flipbook as a file for offline viewing using the flipbook reader app or download the html to host it yourself on your website. The downloads have no external dependency on heyzine or the internet.
c80f0f1006