Current version: 4.02
Released: 2019 Sep 25
Released: 2019 Sep 25
The GPG/PGP key used to sign the packages isavailable here, or from the PGP keyservers(search for [email protected]).
Download XpdfReader:
After two decades of experience, three television series (in English and French), five James Beard awards, thirty books, countless articles, and hundreds of thousands of miles traveled, Steven Raichlen has estab - lished himself as the world’s definitive authority on all things cooked with live fire.
- Linux 32-bit: download(GPG signature)
- Linux 64-bit: download(GPG signature)
- Windows 32-bit: download(GPG signature)
- Windows 64-bit: download(GPG signature)
![Pdf Pdf](/uploads/1/2/5/7/125745572/405835245.jpg)
Download the Xpdf command line tools:
- Linux 32/64-bit: download(GPG signature)
- Windows 32/64-bit: download(GPG signature)
- Mac 64-bit: download(GPG signature)
Download the Xpdf source code:
- source code(GPG signature)
- Apache-licensed modules(GPG signature)
Download fonts:
Download language support packages for Xpdf:
- Arabic[updated 2011-Aug-15]
- Chinese/simplified[updated 2017-Jul-25]
- Chinese/traditional[updated 2017-Jul-25]
- Cyrillic[updated 2011-Aug-15]
- Greek[updated 2011-Aug-15]
- Hebrew[updated 2011-Aug-15]
- Japanese[updated 2017-Jul-25]
- Korean[updated 2017-Jul-25]
- Latin2[updated 2011-Aug-15]
- Thai[updated 2011-Aug-15]
- Turkish[updated 2011-Aug-15]
Xpdf and XpdfReader use the following open source libraries:
- Qt- download Qt 5.9.7
- FreeType- download FreeType 2.10.1
- libpng- download libpng 1.6.35
- zlib- download zlib 1.2.11
- Little CMS- download lcms 2.9
Power BI, Microsoft’s business analytics and data reporting suite, now integrates with the Python programming language by way of a feature preview in the August 2018 release of Power BI.
As described in a blog post summarizing the release, Python scripts may be run directly inside the Power BI Desktop application, and can be leveraged for “data cleansing, analysis, and visualization.”
By selecting “Python” in the “Get Data” dialog, the user can paste a Python script into a supplied window and use a script’s dataframe output as a source. Python scripting can also be used to create visuals in a report. The visuals update automatically whenever data changes, although “the visual itself is not interactive.”
Microsoft has also supplied a demo Power BI file with working examples of popular Python packages used to create visualizations and transformations for a sample data set. Included examples feature the Seaborn and Altair visual plotting libraries; Scikit-learn, a popular library for machine learning tasks; FlashText, a regex-like seach-and-replace system; and PyFlux/Pendulum for date and time parsing.
Power BI has long integrated with R, another popular language for data manipulation and analytics. But while R has remained a niche language, Python has enjoyed wide adoption in both data science circles and the general programming population, thanks to its broad selection of third-party packages that handle nearly every conceivable data-handling need.
Microsoft may also be considering Python integration with its Excel spreadsheet product, based on a user survey about Excel that circulated late last year. However, no official announcement has been made yet. Microsoft emphasized after the conclusion of the survey that this was “an area of exploration for us, without any specific timeline.”
Other additions to Power BI this time around include a long-awaited print-to-PDF feature for reports, and a data connector for Apache Spark clusters. Many of the updates for Power BI Desktop are slated to show up in a future release of Power BI Report Server, a version of which is due in late August 2018.