Parent Keyword

Step-by-step guide: How to define parent and child keywords

When simple keyword matching on this url would take place now it would be blocked, hiding search results on this. Which is exactly what I want. Would it also block good things? TUMBLR IS PORN SO WHY NOT LET THE VOTES CHANGE THE PARENT(MAJORITY OF THE TAGGED SITES TAGGING). ParentLocker is a feature-rich online school management and communications platform. Built around ease-of-use, power and flexibility, ParentLocker helps streamline all aspects of school administration. The Hennessy clan - mother Cate, daughters Bridget and Kerry, and son Rory - look to one another for guidance and support after the death of Paul, the family patriarch. Cate's parents lend a hand. Stars: Katey Sagal, Kaley Cuoco, Amy Davidson, Martin Spanjers. Definition and Usage The super keyword refers to superclass (parent) objects. It is used to call superclass methods, and to access the superclass constructor. The most common use of the super keyword is to eliminate the confusion between superclasses.

Keywords are displayed in alphabetical order in your keywords panel. To help users more readily find information when they use your CHM and HTML documentation, HelpNDoc allows you to define an organizational hierarchy by forming parent-child relationships among your keywords.

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You may use a simple parent-child structure or form a multi-tiered hierarchy. When you add a new keyword it is automatically classified as a parent keyword. You can make an existing keyword a child simply by moving it beneath its parent.
There are two ways to define a parent-child relationship:

1. Move a child keyword when the parent is immediately above

Option 1

Click the keyword that will become the child to select it.
Click the right arrow in the Keywords section of the Home ribbon tab.
This indents the keyword, making it a child of the parent immediately above it.

To remove this parent-child relationship, click the left arrow.
This moves the child keyword left.

Option 2

Right-click the keyword that will become the child. This selects that keyword and displays a popup menu.
Select Move keyword then click Move right. This indents the keyword, making it a child to the parent keyword immediately above it.

To remove this parent-child relationship, right-click the child keyword to select it and display the popup menu.
Select Move keyword and then select Move left. This moves the keyword left as outlined above.

2. Drag and drop a child keyword

Click the keyword that will become the child to select it.
While holding down your mouse button, drag the keyword toward the parent keyword. This displays a yellow arrow.
When the yellow arrow points to the parent keyword release your mouse. This drops the child keyword and displays it indented below its new parent keyword.

If a parent keyword has multiple children, the children keywords are displayed in alphabetical order. You can drag a child keyword to another parent using the steps outlined above.

When you have multi-tiered keywords, you can drag a child keyword upward to elevate its level. In the example to the left, a second-level child keyword is being dragged upward to convert it to a first-level child.

To make a child keyword a first-level parent keyword, you can drag it to Project keywords displayed on the first line of your keyword panel. When you release your mouse, that keyword is now displayed in alphabetical order with the other parent keywords.

Parent Keywords

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When you form a parent-child relationship it is an organizational hierarchy; it does not impact the association keywords have with topics. For example, when a keyword becomes a child, it maintains the associations you’ve defined with topics. It also does not inherit the associations of the parent keyword.

Adobe Bridge CS3 (2.1), CS4, and CS5 support nested keyword hierarchies. Keywords can contain other keyword hierarchies of arbitrary depth.

Parent Keyword Java

Create keywords in Adobe Bridge by doing any of the following:

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  • Click the New Keyword or New Sub Keyword button in the Keywords panel.
  • Right-click (Windows) or Control-click (Mac OS) in the list of keywords in the Keywords panel and choose New Keyword or New Sub Keyword.
  • Click the Keywords panel menu button and choose New Keyword or New Sub Keyword.

If a keyword is selected, clicking New Keyword creates an entry at the same level as the selected keyword (a sibling to the selection). Clicking New Sub Keyword creates an entry subordinate to the selected item (a child of the selection.) If no selection exists, only the New Keyword action is available. Selecting this option creates a keyword at the root level.

Parent Keyword In Pega

To create a simple keyword structure starting at the root, follow these steps:

  1. Deselect any current keyword item by clicking in the empty space at the bottom of the keyword list. If empty space does not exist, select any root level keyword.
  2. Click New Keyword to create an empty root-level keyword.
  3. Name the keyword and press Enter; the new keyword is sorted alphabetically and selected.
  4. Click New Sub Keyword to create a keyword entry as a child of the currently selected item. Name the keyword press Enter.

You can create multiple keywords in a single step using the Search field at the bottom of the Keywords panel. Type keywords separated by commas or semicolons into the field, and then click New Keyword or New Sub Keyword. Keywords are created using the current selection rules described above.

The Search field helps you find items in long keyword lists. To search, do the following:

  1. Click the magnifying glass icon in the Search field at the bottom of the Keywords panel.
  2. Select a search method: Contains, Equals, or Starts With.
  3. Type in the field. All keywords that match the criteria are located.

All matching items are highlighted in colors. Green represents a found keyword that is selected; yellow represents a found but deselected keyword. To find previous or next keywords, click the Find Previous or Find Next buttons next to the Search field. Or, use the F3 and Shift + F3 keyboard shortcuts.

To clear text from Search field, click the circle with an X to the right of the field.

When a keyword has been found, press Enter to apply (or remove) the keyword from currently selected images. If the keyword doesn't yet exist, press Enter to create and apply it to the selected images.

  • Click the check box next to a keyword to apply it to currently selected files.
  • Deselect a keyword to remove the keyword from the selected files.
  • To apply a keyword and all of its parents Shift-click. To make this behavior the default for standard mouse clicks, choose File > Preferences > Keywords (Windows) or Bridge > Preferences > Keywords (Mac OS. Then, select Automatically Apply Parent Keywords.

You can add entire keyword branches to images with a single click. Keywords that are marked as excluded are ignored in this case. Excluded keywords are shown in brackets. To exclude a keyword, right-click (Windows) or Control-click (Mac OS) the keyword and choose Exclude from the context menu.

Parent Keyword In Python

Note: Keywords can only be excluded if they contain other keywords. You can include an excluded a keyword by right-clicking on it and selecting Include from the context menu. The Exclude feature is only relevant when you auto-apply parent keywords. Excluded keywords are applied to hierarchical keyword structures.

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The Keywords panel menu contains commands for importing and exporting keywords. The Import command merges imported keywords with existing keywords in the Keywords panel. The Clear And Import command replaces existing keywords with those being imported.

Keywords are imported and exported using text files. These files are encoded as UTF-8 (or ASCII which is a subset of UTF-8). To share your keywords with another Bridge user, select Export from the panel menu and specify a filename and path where the keywords are written. Other Bridge users can import this file. You can also use the export capability to back up your keyword data or to keep separate keyword lists that you load as needed.

It's unnecessary to open or edit keyword files outside Bridge. However, since these are simple text files you can edit your keyword list in a text editor and then import it into Bridge. The format is simple; each line of the file contains a single keyword. Leading <TAB> characters are used to signify parent/child relationships between keywords. A line with no preceding <TAB> characters indicates that the keyword is at the root level. A single <TAB> character indicates that it is one level deep and is a child of the closest keyword above it that is at the root. Keywords can optionally be marked as excluded by enclosing them in brackets. See Excluding keywords for more details.

[People]
<TAB>John
<TAB>Kathy
City
<TAB>San Francisco
<TAB>New York
Food
<TAB>Vegetables
<TAB><TAB>Carrots

Adobe Bridge provides different methods for reading and writing hierarchical keywords. To access keywords, choose Edit > Preferences > Keywords (Windows) or Bridge > Preferences > Keywords (Mac OS).

By default, Read Hierarchical Keywords is selected.

Parent Keyword Pega

Keywords are written into the XMP dc:subject field as flat keywords (with no hierarchical information). When displaying the keywords applied to a set of selected files, Bridge looks for all matching keywords in the keyword panel hierarchy and selects them all. Deselecting one instance of the keyword in the hierarchy removes it from dc:subject. That keyword is also deselected in all other locations. If keywords are encountered that are not in the hierarchy, then they are added to the Other Keywords keyword at the same level.

  1. Only the Read Hierarchical Keywords option is selected (default).

When Read Hierarchal Keywords is the only selected option, keywords are written to the dc:subject field flat. They are also written to the lr:hierarchicalSubject in a '|' delimited hierarchical form.

Bridge uses this hierarchical information when showing which keywords were applied to the selected files. If hierarchical information is present (either in lr:hierarchicalSubject or dc:subject), then keywords in multiple locations in the hierarchy aren't selected in every location. Instead, Bridge finds and selects only the one that was originally applied. Also, Bridge does not add unknown keywords to Other Keywords if they have hierarchical information. Instead, they are added to the keyword hierarchy in their proper location, adding parent keywords if necessary. Keywords added in this way are not persistent unless explicitly made so by the user (as is true of the keywords added to Other Keywords). For example:

dc:subject - Places; California; San Francisco
lr:hierarchicalSubject - Places; Places|California; Places|California|San Francisco

  1. Both Read Hierarchical Keywords and Write Hierarchical Keywords are selected.

In this configuration you get the same behavior as option 2, except that hierarchical keywords are written into dc:subject (in addition to lr:hierarchicalSubject). You have the option of using any one of the following characters as the delimiter when writing to dc:subject: '|', ':', '/', '. The default is '|'. The '|' character is always used when writing to lr:hierachicalSubject. Bridge can be configured to interpret any combination of these characters as delimiters when reading. For example:

Dc:subject - Places; Places/California; Places/California/San Francisco
lr:hierarchicalSubject - Places; Places|California; Places|California|San Francisco

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