Search download the application related to download full version spColumn at ShareAppsCrack.com - visit details at ShareAppsCrack.com. SpReporter is a module of the spColumn program. It enables the user to view, customize, print and export reports in different formats. SpReporter is accessed from within spColumn. Once a successful run has been performed, you can open spReporter by selecting the Reporter command from the View menu. Powered by the advanced and flexible graphical interfaces of the new sp2D/3DView and spSection Module, spColumn v7.00 is widely used for design and investigation of columns, shear walls, bridge piers as well as typical framing elements in buildings and other structures.
SpColumn - for design and investigation of rectangular, round, and irregular concrete columns including slenderness effects. Upgraded to ACI 318-11, spColumn v4.80 is widely used for design of shear walls, bridge piers as well as typical framing elements in buildings and structures.
You can show or hide columns in a list or library form as an alternative to deleting them. When you hide a column, it doesn't affect the column or the data in the column, as it would if you delete it. To re-use the column, you can simply show it again in the form.
To show or hide a column in a list or library form:
Go to the list or library for which you want to show or hide columns in the form.
If you are in a list:
If you are in a document library:
At the top of the form, select Edit form > Edit columns.
In the Edit columns pane, check (to show) or uncheck (to hide) the checkbox for the column or columns as needed.
Note
If you want to re-arrange the order of the columns, either drag-and-drop the column name, or first select the far right hand edge of the column name to display the options menu (...) and then select Move Up or Move Down as preferred.
When you're finished, select Save.
You can show or hide columns in a list form based on another column's value by specifying a formula that are equations performing conditional checks on values in a SharePoint list or library.
To specify a conditional formula for a column, in the Edit columns pane:
Navigate to the desired column for which you want to set a conditional formula
Select the far right hand edge of the column name to display the options menu (...)
In the more options, select Edit conditional formula.
In the Edit conditional formula dialog:
When you are finished, select Save.
Formulas are equations that perform conditional checks on column values in a list or library. A formula starts with an equal sign (=) followed by the if function that returns either a true or a false result.
For example, the following formula checks if the value for the Category column is Product Management:
Returning true results in showing the column on the form while returning false hides the column.
The column is represented by specifying the internal name of the field surrounded by square brackets and preceded by a dollar sign: [$InternalName]. For example, to get the value of a field with an internal name of 'ProductName', use [$ProductName].
While the formula supports many of the available column types, we do not currently support the following column types:

The following formula checks if the choice column [$Category] has a value Product Management:
The following formula checks if the number column [$Flightscost] is less than or equal to 120:
You can also do arithmetic calculations, such as adding the value of two columns and checking its sum as given in the following formula:
The following formula checks if the date column [$StartDate] is equal to a specific date. To do so, it uses the Date() function to convert a given string into a date:

An example of checking if the date column [$StartDate] is less than or equal to a specific date:
An example of checking if the dates from [$StartDate] and [$EndDate] columns are between specific dates:
The following formula checks if an email of person column [$Owner] is equal to a specific user's email:
The following formula checks if the Yes/No column [$Promoted] is equal to a Yes. To do so, it checks for the value true which maps to Yes for users.
Note
When accessing lookup columns in column or view formatting, you have access to the lookup value and lookup id as separate values. In form formatting and conditional field expressions, both values are returned as a single line of text. For instance, a lookup column referencing an item with item ID 1 (in the source list) with a value of Toronto will have a value of 1;#Toronto when used in form formatting or conditional field expressions.
The following formula checks if the lookup column [$City] has a value equal to Toronto. To do so, it splits the lookup value result by the separator and checks against the value.
Similarly, you can compare against the ID portion of the lookup using this expression:
spColumn is a professional software application designed for structural engineers who want to analyze and compare designs with multiple columns.
It features a wide array of irregularly shaped columns and reinforced concrete columns, enabling you to export projects as Factored or Nominal Interaction Diagrams or 3D Failure Surfaces, as well as export column sections as AutoCAD drawings (.dxf format) or graphical reports as images (.emf format).
The program is packed in a classical-looking interface that doesn't put emphasis on appearance. However, it has a well-structured layout that permits you to easily input data, view the model, and make adjustments.

When creating a new project, you can input general information pertaining to the project name, column, engineer, measurement unit, run option (investigation or design), run axis (about x- or y-axis, biaxial), the design code (ACI 318-11, 318-08, 318-05, 318-02, or CSA A23.3-04 or A23.3-94), as well as whether to consider slenderness or not.
What's more, you can edit material properties regarding concrete and reinforcing steel columns, create rectangular, circular or irregular shapes, make all sides equal or different, equalize spacing, make patterns irregular, confine columns (tied, spiral, other), as well as to flip or rotate sections.
It's possible to include nominal diagrams in the design, show or hide load point labels and splice lines, or modify the default startup parameters (data directory, measurement unit, design code, reinforcement, text file viewer, number of lines per printed page).
There were no stability issues in our tests, thanks to the fact that spColumn didn't hang, crash or prompt error messages. Its impact on the overall performance of the machine was minimal, thanks to the fact that it needed low CPU and memory to work properly. On the other hand, the tool hasn't been updated for a while, which is obvious by judging its interface.
Nevertheless, spColumn comes bundled with some powerful features and configuration properties for designing and examining structural projects with multiple columns.
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