In my app I enumerate all phone numbers for a person. For some people the mobile phone number is listed twice, one with the (manual) formatting I use when I enter the number in Outlook and one with all formatting removed.
Hi all, I'm new to obsidian. I've tried looking for an answer, but is there a way to view a markdown note as unformatted text? Ideally being able to switch back and forth. It would help me organize the line breaks, and sometimes I just prefer editing in a notepad.exe style setup.
EDIT: I found a solution here, -markdown/35042/4 Was a bit confused as I missed that I need to 'enable' the snippet to be active, but now source mode looks like I opened notepad.exe, which is awesome!
It restores the files that you deleted, whether from the hard disk, or from the USB, or from the memory card to its original location, in an orderly and orderly manner, and with the same name that it was before the deletion.
A search here and elsewhere on the web for undelete and unformat should offer some options. The sooner you run the fixes and the less you've tried tinkering before trying to unformat or undelete the nuvi, the better your chances. There are free unformat software options available if you look for them.
thanks. i managed to get a firmware update which restored all the files I needed. I will back my garmin up so this doesn't happen again.How did you manage that, firmware update doesn't restore map files and the unit won't boot without maps.
On my 755T and 855, I have the CN NA maps on the SD cards. On these older models, SD maps are named gmapsupp.img, so I have no gmapprom.img on the unit itself. I am able to remove the SD card and the units both boot fine with no gmapprom.img.
I do of course have the base map gmapbmap.img on the unit. I don't know what would happen if I removed that (and I don't intend to risk it by trying)! I've also heard what mu... states in that a mapless nuvi will not boot completely since it can't get past the "Loading maps" graphic. I have no firsthand experience with this since I haven't tried booting a nuvi with no maps.
the unit won't boot without maps.I never knew that. I realize that the Nuvi isn't of much value without maps, but what would keep it from booting if there are no maps to display?It's not that the device won't boot without the detail map. More often than not it will throw up an error message saying there are no maps that support routing and the nüvi cannot be used without them. This would apply even if all the maps were removed, say in an accidental format.
I've also heard what mu... states in that a mapless nuvi will not boot completely since it can't get past the "Loading maps" graphic. I have no firsthand experience with this since I haven't tried booting a nuvi with no maps.
Regardless of whether it is a free update or map subscription, within the first year of ownership (based upon the first satellite fix) he should be able to download the detail map from Garmin's servers. After that, the only way he can download a map is by having a lifetime map subscription or purchasing a one-time map update.
You can clear cells to remove the cell contents (formulas and data), formats (including number formats, conditional formats, and borders), and any attached comments. The cleared cells remain as blank or unformatted cells on the worksheet.
The software supports all file systems which are natively supported by Microsoft Windows, Apple Macintosh or Linux-based operating systems. The latest edition adds support for more than thirty additional file signatures, and it includes a straightforward script editor which allows advanced users to create custom file signatures for rarer files types. ","thumbnailUrl":null},"name":"Unformat","applicationCategory":"Utilities & Operating Systems","applicationSubCategory":"File Management","description":"Unformat is a data recovery software from LSoft Technologies. This utility is ideal for anyone, regardless of their level of experience with data recovery, who needs to unformat hard drive partitions or any other kind of digital storage media which has been accidentally formatted or damaged due to a logical drive failure. It can recover individual files, deleted or damaged partitions and formatted disks or partitions by exploiting the fact that deleted data is not actually permanently deleted until it has been overwritten by another file copy or creation process.
One issue we noticed is that the search query only checks against the cell value, not the displayed value. This is kind of counter-intuitive, I would expect it to compare with the displayed string value.
For example if you have a numeric column with format 0,0.00 and a cell has a value of 1000 then it displays 1,000.00, however if you do a search for 1,000 you get 0 results, or if you do a search for 0.0 you also get 0 results. Only if you search for the raw source number 1000 (or a subset of that, like 100) do you get results. This is counter-intuitive to users, they expect a search to be what you see is what you search for at the least. Ideally it should search both the source value and the rendered value.
Maybe it would work if you call the numbro.unformat on queryStringu in queryMethod. We should get 1000 from 1,000.00.
It would also be faster than the default search cause we unformat data only once.
If you "quick"-formatted your drive (and have not re-used that drive since then) there are third-party tools that can (attempt to) "unformat" it. However, this can also result in files that you deliberately deleted also being restored, which may be a factor in whether or not you want to do this.
I am regularly copying and pasting text from SQL Server Management Studio Query Editor to Writer and was tired of waiting for the text color format to be retrieved when forgetting to type Shift with Ctrl+V.
Active@ Data Recovery Software Active Data Recovery Software is a division of LSoft Technologies Inc, software development company designing disk utilities related to the recovery of lost data and online privacy. Unique Active@ technologies allow our solutions to be easily integrated with operating system and network environment, suggesting to user powerful and flexible tools for computer management.
@Kira Resari's Word-specific, one-step shortcut is much better than having to learn and execute a sequence of keypresses every time you need to paste unformatted text. But I'm with @noseratio, a general solution for that works throughout Windows is even better. AutoHotkey is great for the purpose, if you need or might use it for other reasons as well.
The code excerpt below shows how I'm currently doing it in AutoHotkey. Note that this script preserves the original content of the Windows clipboard so that you can still paste formatted text if you need it elsewhere or change your mind.My particular shortcut is Ctl+v pressed twice in very quick succession, just because I find it easier to remember than a combo like Ctrl+Shift+V. But if you want a separate shortcut such as Ctrl+Shift+V, follow the shortcut definition line with the portion of the code beginning with beginning on the line after CopyUnformattedFromClipboardand continuing through and including the next Return (delete everything else).
Alternatively, Win users can avoid AutoHotKey by just using the "Paste as Plain Text" feature in Microsoft PowerToys. You can assign a keyboard shortcut of your choice, and it works across all programs. Just remember that PowerToys must be running in the background, with this feature enabled. It can be set to run at startup.
While you are writing, you may find that some sections of text need to be edited and rearranged to improve the flow. The citations you insert with EndNote are directly linked to your EndNote library and there is a lot of coding underpinning these links. If you copy and paste text containing EndNote formatted citations, you will end up corrupting your library and could potentially lose it. You need to temporarily make those links inactive to edit safely.
Never store your document with unformatted citations. Always update citations and bibliography to reinstate the EndNote coding before you save and close your document at the end of an editing session.
It is a good idea to unformat your citations and reformat them periodically as you are working. It's like shutting down your computer and restarting it to fix glitches. This is a way of shutting down your document and restarting it to refresh the connections between your document and your EndNote library.
It is a good idea to work on sections or chapters of a longer work separately. However, there comes a time when they need to be combined. If you copy and paste text containing live EndNote formatted citations, you will end up corrupting your library and your document. You need to make those links temporarily inactive to edit safely. The Convert to Unformatted Citations does this so you can edit safely. As an extra precaution, work with copies of the original chapters.
You may need to do further editing to format headings and spaces. If you need to move sections of EndNote formatted text as part of this editing, convert the text to unformatted citations first. Update citations and bibliography after the text is moved to where you want it.
Never store your document with unformatted citations. Always update citations and bibliography to reinstate the EndNote coding before you save and close your document at the end of an editing session. If you can't complete the compilation of your thesis in one session, update citations and bibliography of your combined document, and save before closing. When you come back to this, convert the combined document to unformatted citations and continue combing as above.
When you use Cite While You Write (CWYW) in Word, the document is formatted with field codes that allow EndNote to format your in-text citations and create your reference list. This formatting actively links your document to your EndNote library. It is necessary to remove these links before submitting a copy of your work for marking or review or publishing.
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