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The Experts below are selected from a list of 102 Experts worldwide ranked by ideXlab platform

Lightfoot Jonathan - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

Virginia Andersen - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • How to Do Everything with Microsoft Office Access 2007
    2006
    Co-Authors: Virginia Andersen
    Abstract:

    Maximize the powerful features of the latest release of today's most popular desktop database program. How to Do Everything with Microsoft Office Access 2007 shows you how to create and customize an efficient, multi-user database, retrieve, interpret, and share your data, secure your information, and much more. Designed to help you get things done quickly and easily, this user-friendly guide is your all-access pass to Access 2007. Navigate the new user interface with ease Design a well-organized database using pre-designed templates Enter and edit data and ensure data validity Sort, filter, and print records Extract specific information using queries Master form and report design basics Add charts and graphs to forms and reports easily Optimize database performance and speed Exchange database objects and text files between Access databases Table of contents Part 1: Get Started Chapter 1: Getting Acquainted with Access 2007 Chapter 2: Create a Database Chapter 3: Create and Modify Tables Chapter 4: Relate Tables Chapter 5: Enter and Edit Data Part 2: Retrieve and Present Information Chapter 6: Sort, Filter, and Print Records Chapter 7: Extract Data with Queries Chapter 8: Create Advance Queries Chapter 9: Understand Form and Report Design Basics Chapter 10: Create Custom Forms and Subforms Chapter 11: Create and Customize Reports and Subreports Chapter 12: Create Charts and Graphs Part 3: Improve the Access 2003 Workplace Chapter 13: Customize the Workplace Chapter 14: Speed Up Your Database Chapter 15: Automate the Macros Chapter 16: Customize the Navigation Pane Chapter 17: Create Custom Switchboards and Dialog Part 4: Exchange Data with Others Chapter 18: Exchange Database Objects and Text Chapter 19: Exchange Data with Outside Sources Chapter 20: Use SharePoint with Sare with Multiple Chapter 21: Secure a Database Appendix: Convert to Access

Joseph M. Manzo - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • Microsoft Office Access 2007 in Business
    2007
    Co-Authors: Joseph M. Manzo
    Abstract:

    Access Core Table of Contents Chapter 1 Introduction What is Access? Databases Business Decisions and Databases Creating a New Access Database Navigation Pane and Access Objects File Formats and Other Access Settings Access Help Using versus Creating Databases Chapter 2 The Database Table Creating Tables Creating a New Table Field Names, Data Types, and Field Properties Indexing and Primary Keys Entering and Formatting Data Adjusting and Hiding Columns and Rows Copying and Pasting Data Sorting and Filtering Data Editing Tables Changing Data Types and Field Properties Changing the Sequence of Field Editing Data and Field Names Inserting Fields Deleting Fields and Records Importing and Linking Data Importing Data Linking Data Printing Tables Chapter 3 Selecting and Summarizing Data from Tables Know Your Data Getting Started Single Field Primary Key Tables Multiple Field Primary Key Tables Fundamental Query Techniques (The Select Query) Creating a New Query Adding Fields and Adjusting Columns Query Name and Properties Defining Basic Criteria (OR AND) Formatting and Sorting Data Editing Queries Exporting Queries to Excel Advanced Queries Grouping Data Mathematical Summaries (Aggregate Functions) Nested Queries Crosstab Queries Chapter 4 Applying Calculations to Data Formulas Custom Fields Calculated Fields The Expression Builder IIF Function Basic IIF Function Nested IIF Functions Financial Functions Future Value Payment Function Help with Functions Chapter 5 Reports Fundamental Report Techniques Creating a New Report Setting the Dimensions of a Report Report Header Page Header Detail Page Footer Report Footer Advanced Report Techniques Grouping Data Sorting Data Calculated Fields Conditional Formatting Group and Report Totals Lines Dates Chapter 6 Applying Core Competency Skills Using Multiple Tables in Queries Joining Tables Inner Joins Outer Joins Defining Table Relationships Comprehensive Access Project Selecting Tables Adding and Joining Tables in a Select Query Creating a Parameter Query Adding Calculations Constructing the Final Report

Quick Source - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • Adobe Acrobat 9 Quick Source Guide
    2008
    Co-Authors: Quick Source
    Abstract:

    Do you need an easy-to-follow software reference right at your fingertips? Our 6 page, tri-fold guides are the answer. These quick reference guides include step by step instructions to help users to learn software features more quickly, as well as full color screen graphics to highlight important features. Quick Source reference guides also include the software program ,s NEW features and give you quick access to time saving shortcuts. The Adobe Acrobat 9 Quick Source guide is a clear and concise tool for learning the features in Acrobat 9. Features contained in this guide include NEW features such as PDF Portfolios, Comparing Document Versions, Searching Across Multiple Documents, Using the Forms Wizard, and Searching and Redacting Words. It also includes Opening a Document, Using the Navigation Pane, Converting a File to PDF, Creating Page Thumbnails, Adding Multimedia Content, Distributing a Form, Printing a PDF Document, and much more.

  • Adobe Acrobat 8 Quick Source Guide
    2007
    Co-Authors: Quick Source
    Abstract:

    Do you need an easy-to-follow software reference right at your fingertips? Our 6 page, tri-fold guides are the answer. These quick reference guides include step by step instructions to help users to learn software features more quickly, as well as full color screen graphics to highlight important features. Quick Source reference guides also include the software program s NEW features and gives you quick access to time saving shortcuts. The Adobe Acrobat 8 Quick Source guide is a clear and concise tool for learning the features in Acrobat 8. Features contained in this guide include NEW features such as Using the Getting Started Window, and Creating a PDF from a Blank Page. It also includes Opening a Document, Converting a File to PDF, Using the Navigation Pane, Inserting Pages, Adding a Password to a Document, Using the Forms Toolbar, Inserting Headers and Footers, Using the Comment and Markup Toolbar, and much more.

Bruno P. Petruccelli - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • Infectious Disease: A Geographic Guide and Atlas of Human Infectious Diseases
    Emerging Infectious Diseases, 2012
    Co-Authors: Bruno P. Petruccelli
    Abstract:

    Infectious Disease: A Geographic Guide and Atlas of Human Infectious Diseases, 2 books recently published by Wiley-Blackwell, deliver to the global medicine bookshelf diagnostic adjuncts for expatriate clinicians and those who see immigrants or returning travelers, while also serving as pretravel references on regional disease risk and authoritative sources for anyone needing infectious diseases information. Mary Wilson, who contributed to the first book and wrote the foreword for the second, filled a similar need in 1991 with A World Guide to Infections. Now these new books remind us that even in the age of near–real-time, electronic references, a printed volume to hold in one’s hands can be an unmatched resource. Infectious Disease: A Geographic Guide, edited by Eskild Petersen, Lin Chen, and Patricia Schlagenhauf, uses United Nations regions as an organizational basis, which achieves the objective of maintaining relevance with respect to by-country travel while reflecting the fact that pathogens do not recognize political borders. The regions are still country groupings, but the way this book cuts up the world integrates how transmission varies by topography, geoclimatic factors, and the fauna that include pertinent disease reservoirs and vectors. Well-written chapters also review background regional histories, evolving global disease patterns, and the impacts of migration, climate change, and public health interventions. Extensively published physicians who have experience in geographic medicine contributed to all of the book’s clinical content. Fifteen of the 22 region-specific chapters include authorship from within that region. Nicely organized tables dominate over paragraphs of text. Occasional inconsistencies occur in the use of a unique font that sets off headings and subheadings, but this is a relatively minor side effect of a first printing. The sequence that reliably characterizes nearly all of the region chapters is by organ system, with diseases then addressed categorically by duration of symptoms, using a 4-week cutoff point. Additional sections cover adenopathy, fever without focal symptoms, eosinophilia with elevated IgE, antimicrobial drug resistance, vaccine-preventable diseases, and statistical summaries addressing economics, demographics, and mortality. However, some authors added sections with a syndromic, taxonomic, transmission-based, or incubation-based approach, and 4 of the chapters have more than a slight departure from the essential scheme. Nevertheless, the quality of the content is consistent and, in fact, is enhanced by the variations. Overall, the Geographic Guide is an outstanding, quick reference for clinicians. The book provides a link between a patient’s history or travel itinerary on one hand and a differential diagnosis or guidance for preventive measures on the other. From its title and external appearance, Atlas of Human Infectious Disease could be mistaken for a cytology or histology text. Once open, a geography book appears, and quickly enough, its pages reveal an essential visual almanac for anyone whose work confronts, or whose interests include, infectious diseases. This book shows the pictures we often seek but have difficulty finding: those that answer the question, “Where?” For a less common disease, where has it been reported? For a more common one, where is it not controlled? Part atlas and part disease manual, this work reflects an intensive effort by 120 contributors and reviewers, assuring the user of a broad, collective expertise. Oxford tropical disease researchers Heiman F.L. Wertheim and Peter Horby and ProMED mail co-founder John P. Woodall are the lead editors. The book provides taxonomic consistency with widely available sources such as the Control of Communicable Diseases Manual, and scientific articles specific to each topic were used extensively. The first 40 of its 273 pages offer mapping of factors that influence disease transmission, clinical penetrance, and control. This portion could easily stand alone as a reference for a broad range of readers interested in any of numerous topics, from urbanization to climate to the global use of antibiotics and vaccines. The bulk of the book is a compendium of 2-page, clinical–epidemiologic summaries of human infections, each having the same left-page map and right-page text layout. A world map of equal area is the usual template for incidence and endemicity displays, whereas regional maps and insets are used as needed; however, no section or entry on geographically diverse, health care–associated bacterial infections is included. The entries do include selected opportunistic infections, but apart from agents of general public health importance such as bloodborne viruses, health care–associated infections are not given particular attention. On the other hand, doing so could easily have doubled the volume of the book. Overlays on the maps are simple and usually contrast well with the core scheme to readily show relationships. For example, the outlining of vector distributions does not interfere with the use of solid colors to map disease occurrence. Where overlays would not work as well, the page includes one or more parallel maps, which may show inverse relationships such as immunization coverage versus disease incidence. The book indirectly begs for better surveillance by depicting large gray areas marked “No Data”; even the most developed countries often fail to escape this distinction. In fact, the type of passive reporting that supplied map data for some diseases leaves one wondering: is it “no data” or “no disease”? Clever adjustments for reporting bias were made in some cases, though the nature of source data too often prohibits any valid attempt. Likewise, dependence on political borders to outline geographic distribution usually prohibits depiction of spatial density. When a disease has worldwide distribution, that fact is not usually evident in the map, which instead focuses on high-risk areas. This method is appropriate and reinforces the need to use the map and text pages together. Purchasers are provided a code to download the book in various digital formats. Downloading is a fast and easy process, as is using the electronic version of the book itself. A single click on any topic or figure in the Navigation Pane takes the reader directly to the page desired. The resolution is excellent, and one can either scroll or page up and down through each entry. (An electronic book version of Infectious Disease: A Geographic Guide is also available from the publisher, but as a separate purchase from the print edition.) The Atlas clearly sets a new standard as a geographic medicine reference and is certain to become an indispensable tool for epidemiologists and infectious diseases specialists. The editors hope it will also encourage the reporting of infectious diseases worldwide, which may well become its most important role.