Document file format
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TOPIC.LIFESTYLE AND DISEASES
Lifestyle diseases include atherosclerosis, heart disease, and stroke; obesity and type 2 diabetes; and diseases associated with smoking and alcohol and drug abuse. Regular physical activity helps prevent obesity, heart disease, hypertension, diabetes, colon cancer, and premature mortality.
[1]Lifestyle diseases can be defined as diseases linked with ones lifestyle. Lifestyle diseases are non-communicable diseases. They are caused by lack of physical activity, unhealthy eating, alcohol, substance use disorders and smoking tobacco, which can lead to heart disease, stroke, obesity, type II diabetes and Lung cancer.
[2] The diseases that appear to increase in frequency as countries become more industrialized and people live longer include Alzheimer's disease, arthritis, atherosclerosis, asthma, cancer, chronic liver disease or cirrhosis, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, colitis, irritable bowel syndrome, type 2 diabetes, heart disease, hypertension, metabolic syndrome, chronic kidney failure, osteoporosis, PCOD, stroke, depression, obesity and vascular dementia.
Lifestyle disease may soon have a impact on the workforce and the cost of health care. Treating these non-communicable d
iseases can be expensive to treat.
[3]It can be critical for the patients health to receive primary prevention and identify early symptoms of these non communicable disease. These lifestyle disease are expected to increase throughout the years if people do not improve their lifestyle choices.
[4]Some commenters maintain a distinction between disecetion of longevity and diseases of Civilization or diseases of affluence.
[5] Certain diseases, such as diabetes, dental caasthma, appear at greater rates in young populations living in the "western" way; their increased incidence is not related to age, so the terms cannot accurately be used interchangeably for all diseases.
lization or diseases of affluenc
Common document file formats
- ASCII, UTF-8 — plain text formats
- Amigaguide
- .doc for Microsoft Word — Structural binary format developed by Microsoft (specifications available since 2008 under the Open Specification Promise)[1][2]
- Dj— file format designed primarily to store scanned documents[3]
- DocBook — an XML format for technical documentation
- HTML (.html, .htm), (open standard, ISO from 2000), in combination with possible image files referred to.
- FictionBook (.fb2) — open XML-based e-book format
- Office Open XML — .docx (XML-based standard for office documents)
- OpenDocument — .odt (XML-based standard for office documents)
- OpenOffice.org XML — .sxw (open, XML-based format for office documents)
- OXPS — Open XML Paper Specification (Windows 8.1 and above, older version is XPS used in Windows 7)
- PalmDoc — Common[citation needed] Handheld document format
- .pages for Pages
- PDF — Open standard for document exchange. ISO standards include PDF/X (eXchange), PDF/A (Archive), PDF/E (Engineering), ISO 32000 (PDF), PDF/UA (Accessibility) and PDF/VT (Variable data and transactional printing). PDF is readable on almost every platform with free or open source readers. Open source PDF creators are also available.
- PostScript - .ps
- Rich Text Format (RTF) — meta data format being developed by Microsoft since 1987 for Microsoft products and cross-platform document interchange[4][5][6][7][8]
- SYmbolic LinK (SYLK)
- Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) - Graphics format primarily for vector-based images.
- TeX — Popular[citation needed] open-source typesetting program and format. First successful mathematical notation language.
- TEI — XML format for digital publication
- Troff
- Uniform Office Format — Chinese standard
- WordPerfect (.wpd, .wp, .wp7, .doc) (Note: possible confusion with Word format extension)
See also
- List of document file formats
- List of document markup languages
- Comparison of document markup languages
- Open format
- Word Processor
- Desktop Publishing
- LaTex
References
- ^ "Microsoft Office Binary (doc, xls, ppt) File Formats". 2008-02-15. Archived from the original on 2009-03-08. Retrieved 2010-03-18.
- ^ Microsoft Corporation (2010-07-23). "MS-DOC - Word Binary File Format (.doc) Structure Specification". Retrieved 2010-08-08.
- ^ "What is DjVu - DjVu.org". DjVu.org. Retrieved 2009-03-05.
- ^ Microsoft Corporation (May 1999). "Rich Text Format (RTF) Specification, version 1.6". Retrieved 2010-03-13.
- ^ "4.3 Non-HTML file formats". e-Government Unit. May 2002. Archived from the original on February 18, 2010. Retrieved 2010-03-13.
- ^ "RTF (.rtf)—Wolfram Language Documentation". reference.wolfram.com.
- ^ "WD: Rich Text Format (RTF) Specification 1.7". support.microsoft.com.
- ^ Ranjan Parekh, Ranjan (2006). Principles of Multimedia. Tata McGraw-Hill. p. 87. ISBN 0-07-058833-3.