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Hi @StefanP , I understood that you want to remove the project from your Projects list in the sidebar. If you change the sort settings from the ... next to Projects, to Recent or Top, it should eventually go away, as long as you stop visiting that project!
Otherwise, you can collapse the Projects section in the sidebar, drag it to the bottom and use the Starred section instead which you can include just the projects you frequently use and sort them as you like.
I have the same problem as the original poster. I have removed myself from the project team but it is still appearing in my list of projects in the left-hand panel. There has to be some way to remove this, surely.
Similar to .empty(), the .remove() method takes elements out of the DOM. Use .remove() when you want to remove the element itself, as well as everything inside it. In addition to the elements themselves, all bound events and jQuery data associated with the elements are removed. To remove the elements without removing data and events, use .detach() instead.
My ultimate goal is to be able to sort rows by one of my columns, and not have the indents alter how the rows are arranged after this sorting. Therefore I planned to create a new sheet where I removed all the hierarchy/indents (sort of reflattening my sheet), then sort by my column of choice. Is there a way to remove all indents? I am only finding descriptions where you outdent one row at a time.
I have the same question re: removing all indents at once. A report alone with the Smartsheet in its current state will not meet all my needs, hence my desire to remove the indenting and rearrange the sheet. Any help or guidance you can give would be greatly appreciated.
Alternatively, if you just want to erase all hierarchy, you could insert a helper column. Then, Copy/Paste the entire content of the Primary column into this helper, so you keep your data associated with the correct row. Delete out the content from the Primary column so it's blank. Finally, Copy/Paste back the text from your helper column so it appears in the Primary again, and then remove this helper column from your sheet.
I ran into this issue as well. I needed to reformat an existing sheet with lots of individual hierarchical groupings. The fix I came up with was to first create a helper column, "CountAncestors" and then used the following formula in that column and set it to be a column formula:
All of my items had either one or two ancestors so this resulted in a 0, 1 or 2 for each row. I first filtered by the CountAncestors equal to 1, selected all of those rows and clicked the outdent button. I then changed it to filter by 2, selected all of those items and clicked the outdent button twice. If your sheet has additional levels of hierarchy, you would just repeat the process for each additional level.
@OOIWJ You can configure your Input Data tool to skip any number of lines by changing the number on "Start Data Import on Line" in the tool configuration. This is especially helpful when inputting a report with headers. I used the Data Cleansing tool after that to remove null columns, then used the Dynamic Rename tool to rename all the fields with the first row of data. I finished the workflow off by renaming "VOUCHER" to "VOUCHER NUMBER".
In the following example we retrieve the list of classes set on a element as a DOMTokenList using Element.classList. We then remove a token from the list, and write the list into the 's Node.textContent.
\n In the following example we retrieve the list of classes set on a\n element as a DOMTokenList using\n Element.classList. We then remove a token from the list, and write the\n list into the 's Node.textContent.\n
@Ethan_Garfinkle I have gone into the ease of access settings and checked the sticky keys off and when I press shift a few times (mostly when panning the camera in blender) I still keep getting that noise and it does not disable them :(
@Ethan_Garfinkle This is not true. You can keep disabling sticky keys but what is being asked is to actually never enable sticky keys. What you are actually describing is more akin to "turn off sticky keys" and yes i realize disable is the keyword that M$ uses.
The problem is that as long as sticky keys is on the system it will get enabled because people like to play with the L-SHIFT key or whatever the trigger is ... or maybe we're just playing video games and those keys are used all of the time.
@ss6661520After all that is turned off, it will still come back and haunt you if you hold the shift to long. Who uses this crappy thing and why can we (apparently) not remove it from Windows. It is so aggravating.
@Dubla89 this was my exact issue, thanks for sharing your workaround. Definitely frustrating that there isn't an official solution to what I'm sure is a fairly common issue, and especially frustrating that it would be so easy to avoid by logging out before your org removes access, but there's no way to know that until it's too late and you're already stuck in infinite authentication purgatory
I'm trying to add my new work account to my mobile Teams app and it keeps telling me to remove the one that is on there but it won't let me, just goes in a loop like another reader mentioned. Still unable to add new account or delete other accounts. This Teams app is the biggest piece of BS Microsoft has turned out.
You should remove any columns that will never have data, but can you clarify why you want to remove columns that sometimes have data? They would take up barely any file size when empty, and you could handle the nulls in your measures if necessary. What issue are you seeing from sometimes-empty columns?
I have 10 tables. When the reports are run in eFront to create the reports, for some reason there are over 100 columns in each table that have Column names like Column 100 up to Column 222 as well as the valid Columns which I require.
When in Power BI I select the Field List in a Table for any of these tables, I am greeted with the columns in alpha order, but my view of them is being hampered by all of these empty columns. It's a "I can't see the wood for the trees problem"
In Power Query you can Transpose your table. Then if you filter out / remove blank rows (these were columns prior to the transpose step) before transposing once more to return your table to its original layout.
Yes, I don't see a way not to lose them because if you first go from headers to the first row, when you transpose the first column it is not blank (they are the old headers) and the delete blank rows does not find any.
I uninstalled my previous version of node.js (0.8.11) and downloaded the latest, 0.10.24 from the node.js website and installed it. However, after running node --version, it still indicates that I'm running v0.8.11. Obviously, some stuff was left behind during the uninstall process, and it's causing me to have all sorts of errors when trying to add modules through npm. I've seen solutions to this for OSX and Linux, but couldn't find anything for Windows. I'm running Windows 7 64-bit.
I ran into a problem where my version of NodeJS (0.10.26) could NOT be uninstalled nor removed, because Programs & Features in Windows 7 (aka Add/Remove Programs) had no record of my having installed NodeJS... so there was no option to remove it short of manually deleting registry keys and files.
I attempted to install the newest recommended version of NodeJS, but it failed at the end of the installation process and rolled back. Multiple versions of NodeJS also failed, and the installer likewise rolled them back as well. I could not upgrade NodeJS from the command line as I did not have SUDO installed.
SOLUTION: After spending several hours troubleshooting the problem, including upgrading NPM, I decided to reinstall the EXACT version of NodeJS on my system, over the top of the existing installation.
Now that Windows was aware of the forgotten NodeJS installation, I was able to uninstall my existing version of NodeJS completely. I then successfully installed the newest recommended release of NodeJS for the Windows platform (version 4.4.5 as of this writing) without a roll-back initiating.
In my case, the above alone didn't work. I had installed and uninstalled several versions of nodejs to fix this error: npm in windows Error: EISDIR, read at Error (native) that I kept getting on any npm command I tried to run, including getting the npm version with: npm -v.
If by mistake you tried uninstalling through cli (it will not remove completely most often), then you do not get the uninstall option in the control panel. In this case, install the same version of node and then follow step 1.
Dan, Yes it was there. It was a little counter intuitive to me at first. If I Insert the Service Layer Credits as Dynamic Text, I can place it either off the layout frame or give it a text color of 'no color' and it does not show up.
I've got an mxd that I have added as a map into ArcGIS Pro, and I tried the Dynamic Text technique you've spoken about but it simply adds some new text instead of replacing the service layer credits I'm trying to remove.
ArcGIS Pro has the same capabilities as ArcMap. We give you the option to remove the service layer credits (SLCs) that appear in the map frame so you can place them somewhere on the layout rather that having the credits potentially obscure the content in the map. Keep in mind that those credits are there for legal reasons. Removing them from the layout or making the text transparent, etc defeats the purpose of the credits. They should be on the layout.
This will extract the credits from the map frame and place the same information into a paragraph text element on the layout. If you have multiple map frames with different basemaps, all credits are concatenated.
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