this could be funny, if it were not a big issue in the elaboration of a questionnaire.
As I previously mentioned I'm working on building a DB for DG-Infso (EU) from some thousands of answers made by project leaders, collected via Excel.
The bad thing was that apparently many people had changed some of the worksheets, changing dashes (-) to underscores (_) (that was like publications-papers becoming publications_papers).
Even if I understand that for somebody's taste underscore may look nicer than a sign that resemble a minus (so attracting negativity) I did not feel like dozens of people would be taking the effort of manual substitutions just to avoid bad karma.
So I suspected "maybe they are mac users?" (you know mac users are more estetic-oriented...) until I found this post on OPENOFFICE.ORG explaining how openoffice calc changes dashes to underscore in worksheets names.
So cool...
academic patenting
(4)
algorithms
(2)
anvur
(1)
APE-INV
(3)
applicants
(10)
applications
(11)
ascii
(1)
bibliometrics
(7)
bocconi
(2)
bug
(1)
china
(2)
citations
(11)
claims
(3)
concordance
(7)
conference
(8)
CPCs
(2)
curiosities
(1)
data quality
(12)
data recovery
(1)
database
(26)
datamining
(5)
disk
(1)
download
(1)
dump
(1)
ecla
(1)
entity resolution
(4)
EP register
(7)
epo
(15)
equivalents
(1)
espacenet
(2)
ethnicity
(2)
examination
(3)
excel
(3)
free
(2)
function
(1)
GDPR
(1)
gender
(1)
geocoding
(6)
github
(1)
icons
(1)
indicators
(1)
inpadoc
(9)
inventors
(21)
IPC
(21)
IPC35
(4)
job offers
(1)
KITeS
(3)
legal status
(16)
levenshtein
(1)
line breaks
(1)
linked open data
(1)
match
(1)
mobility
(1)
mysql
(23)
nace
(2)
national patents data
(6)
NBER
(1)
news
(1)
NPL
(7)
NUTS3
(6)
OHIM
(1)
openoffice
(1)
orbis
(1)
orcid
(1)
OS
(1)
OST
(2)
password recover
(1)
patent attorneys
(1)
patent data
(2)
patent family
(17)
patent ownership
(3)
patent status
(3)
patent value
(1)
patents
(49)
patentsview
(3)
patstat
(145)
person_id
(13)
priorities
(5)
python
(2)
reclassification
(8)
renewals
(1)
replace
(2)
scientific articles
(2)
scopus
(1)
semantic analysis
(2)
sipo
(3)
sql
(6)
strings
(4)
tool
(9)
trademarks
(2)
triadic patents
(2)
UDF
(1)
USPC
(1)
USPTO
(12)
VBA
(1)
vista
(1)
VM
(1)
webscraping
(2)
WIPO
(10)
workshops
(1)
Wos
(1)
xp
(1)
No comments:
Post a Comment