Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Why is it?
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Why is it? Post 302782177 by Corona688 on Monday 18th of March 2013 11:09:13 AM
Old 03-18-2013
It is, but the rules still apply.

As for your question... A lot of what come here are not professionals, but desperate students who will go to any length to get a free answer. Or desperate, overpromoted technical people who put UNIX on their resume without expecting their knowledge of it to ever actually be called on.
 
AMC-ASSOCIATION-AU(1)					       Auto Multiple Choice					     AMC-ASSOCIATION-AU(1)

NAME
AMC-association-auto - automatic association between students and answer sheets for AMC multiple choice exams. SYNOPSIS
auto-multiple-choice association-auto --data project-data-dir --notes-id id --liste students-list.csv [--encodage-liste list-encoding] --liste-key key DESCRIPTION
The AMC-association-auto.pl command associates students with their answer sheet (when there are no errors from students when coding their student number and no error during data capture). See the section called "Identification of the students" from english user documentation for details. --data project-data-dir gives the directory where data files are (see for example AMC-prepare(1)). --notes-id id gives the identification string of the code provided for student numbers (command AMCcode in the LaTeX source file). --liste students-list.csv gives the students list. --encodage-liste list-encoding gives the students list file encoding (default is utf-8). --liste-key key gives the column name where to find the student number in the students list. --debug file.log gives a file to fill with debugging information. AUTHORS
Alexis Bienvenue <paamc@passoire.fr> Main author Jean Berard Translation from French Georges Khaznadar Translation from French COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2008-2012 Alexis Bienvenue This document can be used according to the terms of the GNU General Public License, version 2 or later. Auto Multiple Choice 1.1.1 06/19/2012 AMC-ASSOCIATION-AU(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:56 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy