For years, architects, engineers, and contractors have focused their efforts on reducing the amount of energy used to operate buildings. As buildings become more energy efficient, a larger percentage of the environmental impacts generated over the lifetime of a building comes from the manufacture, transportation, construction, and demolition of building materials. While many architects and engineers are aware of these embodied environmental impacts, few have the resources and expertise to be able to examine and compare the overall sustainability of different building material options. Tally answers this need for the design and building industry. To learn more or to request a free trial, visit choosetally.com.
Tally can summarize the environmental impacts of two different design options according to up to nine different categories. These results can then be broken down further by life cycle stage, Revit category, and Construction Specifications Institute (CSI) division.
Using the notes question I would like to show the fish name and how many there are. If a user just enters Salmon the tally would just show one since it was only entered once. I have not seen a way to sum based on two fields.
Thank you for the link! I am not that great at JS functions but I will try that out. It looks like in the example that you would have to write out each fruit that you would want to get info on. In my survey I have around 60 fish choices so that might take a while to write. I was hoping to find something that could list all the values entered in the fish field and the corresponding quantity of each.
Thank you for your reply. Unfortunately, there are around 60 fish choices so that might get a little chaotic. I was hoping to find a JS function to do this but I will keep this method in mind if I can't.
1% manual tally is the public process of manually tallying votes in 1 percent of the precincts, selected at random by the elections officials, and in one precinct for each race not included in the randomly selected precincts. This procedure is conducted during the official canvass to verify the accuracy of the automated count.
Manual Tally Methods - During the official canvass of every election in which a voting system is used, the elections officials are required to conduct a public manual tally of the ballots tabulated by the voting system, including vote-by-mail ballots. The elections officials may use one of the following two methods to conduct the 1% manual tally:
Timing of Selection - The elections officials must not randomly choose the initial precincts or select an additional precinct for the manual tally until after the close of the polls on election day.
Public Notice - The manual tally shall be a public process. The elections officials conducting the election must provide at least a five-day public notice of the time and place of the manual tally and of the time and place of the selection of the precincts, batches, or direct recording electronic voting machines subject to the public manual tally before conducting the selection and tally.
Note that sync is intended for safe backup, restore, and sync across devices of current state of a tally set. It is not intended to support simultaneous counting on the same tally set on multiple devices.
Using the HDMI terminal from the CR-N100 will not allow for the tally lamp to automatically work and there are no Canon supported methods to enable this function. The methods to have the tally lamp function are through protocols when the camera is controlled and used over IP. For further assistance, you may contact our PTZ Support Team at 1-800-423-5367, Monday-Friday: 9:00 am to 8:00 pm.
In case anyone else is looking for a solution to this:
I recently realized I could do this by using Bitfocus Companion and Stream Deck. I set the Stream Deck up so that when I change ATEM-input (camera) on the Stream Deck console, Stream Deck also sends tally on/off comands to the cameras through Bitfocu Companion.
You can enable the CR-N100 tally lamp through the online remote controls. Once you are in the remote controls go to into System, then into the Camera section, and the tally lamp options will be listed. In there you can enable the tally lamp and you can set how bright it should be.
If you want to reference the remote setting manual it is on page 66. If you need a copy of that manual it is available HERE. Once you are on the web page click on the Manuals button and the one to reference is named Remote Camera Settings Guide.
They are most useful in counting or tallying ongoing results, such as the score in a game or sport, as no intermediate results need to be erased or discarded. However, because of the length of large numbers, tallies are not commonly used for static text. Notched sticks, known as tally sticks, were also historically used for this purpose.
Counting aids other than body parts appear in the Upper Paleolithic. The oldest tally sticks date to between 35,000 and 25,000 years ago, in the form of notched bones found in the context of the European Aurignacian to Gravettian and in Africa's Late Stone Age.
The so-called Wolf bone is a prehistoric artifact discovered in 1937 in Czechoslovakia during excavations at Doln Věstonice, Moravia, led by Karl Absolon. Dated to the Aurignacian, approximately 30,000 years ago, the bone is marked with 55 marks which may be tally marks. The head of an ivory Venus figurine was excavated close to the bone.[1]
The Ishango bone, found in the Ishango region of the present-day Democratic Republic of Congo, is dated to over 20,000 years old. Upon discovery, it was thought to portray a series of prime numbers. In the book How Mathematics Happened: The First 50,000 Years, Peter Rudman argues that the development of the concept of prime numbers could only have come about after the concept of division, which he dates to after 10,000 BC, with prime numbers probably not being understood until about 500 BC. He also writes that "no attempt has been made to explain why a tally of something should exhibit multiples of two, prime numbers between 10 and 20, and some numbers that are almost multiples of 10."[2] Alexander Marshack examined the Ishango bone microscopically, and concluded that it may represent a six-month lunar calendar.[3]
Tally marks are typically clustered in groups of five for legibility. The cluster size 5 has the advantages of (a) easy conversion into decimal for higher arithmetic operations and (b) avoiding error, as humans can far more easily correctly identify a cluster of 5 than one of 10.[citation needed]
In 2015, Ken Lunde and Daisuke Miura submitted a proposal to encode various systems of tally marks in the Unicode Standard.[9] However, the box tally and dot-and-dash tally characters were not accepted for encoding, and only the five ideographic tally marks (正 scheme) and two Western tally digits were added to the Unicode Standard in the Counting Rod Numerals block in Unicode version 11.0 (June 2018). Only the tally marks for the numbers 1 and 5 are encoded, and tally marks for the numbers 2, 3 and 4 are intended to be composed from sequences of tally mark 1 at the font level.
Does anyone know how to get the running tally back for the refund/payment due or has that feature been completely removed? It seems that some other people have posted to click on "review" and the tally will return, but that doesn't work for me at all. I've also tried some other suggestions based on older posts with no luck. Can anyone offer any help? Thanks!
Thanks for replying! Nope, that button is gone too (I remember it being there last year). All I have is "your progress" which shows how long it is taking me to do my taxes. I can turn that off and on, but the meter still doesn't show.
I just started a new online tax return. After entering income from a W-2 and completing the W-2 section of the program the refund/taxes due amount showed up immediately for both federal and state on the top left of the online program screen.
Any help would be appreciated, and let me know if I can clarify further. I want to scale this exact same tally to fission rate and heating so if any additional input on those types of tallies and needed syntax to run them properly would help as well.
Harmful or discriminatory policies earn negative points or point deductions, while LGBTQ-inclusive or protective laws earn positive points. Fractions of a point may be awarded for states that have enacted a portion of a law, or in cases where local laws provide some protection but do not cover the entire state population.
Policies are evaluated and scored based on their relevance to both sexual orientation and gender identity. As a result, each state has three tallies: a Sexual Orientation tally, a Gender Identity tally, and then an Overall (combined) tally. Having both the sexual orientation and gender identity tallies illustrates how LGBQ-related versus transgender-related policies are differently progressing both within a state and across the country.
Importantly, the policy tally only looks at existing laws and policies, and is therefore only one measure of LGBTQ equality and experiences. The tally and maps do not reflect active legislation that has been proposed but not passed, nor does it reflect social climate, public opinion, the efforts of advocates to prevent further negative laws from happening, or the opportunities for future change. States with low tallies might shift rapidly with an influx of resources, and states with higher tallies might continue to expand equality for LGBTQ people in ways that can provide models for other states.
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