Then between the braces type {AutoTextList "[Pick one]"} and with your cursor still within the braces, press F9; that will collapse (hide) the formula, leaving this: [Pick one] In your document, instruct readers to position their cursor over [Pick one] and right-click to bring up the multiple choices.
What does 300 stand for?
300 stands for Multiple Choices (HTTP status code; indicates client computer may have options for a file)
This definition appears very frequently and is found in the following Acronym Finder categories:
- Information technology (IT) and computers
- Abbreviation Database Surfer
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- Third-Generation
- Maintenance and Material Management
- 3-Methyladenine (autophagy inhibitor)
- 3-Monochloropropane-1,2-Diol
- 3-M Slender Boned Nanism (genetics)
- 3-Nitroproprionic Acid (biomedical)
- Third-Order Zero-Disparity
- Microsoft Windows 3.1 (operating system)
- Stolen Bicycle Located - Take Report (Alabama Public Safety Radio Code)
- The End (sign of completion at the end of a news story)
- Found (HTTP status code; URL found elsewhere)
- See Other (HTTP status code; indicates to look under another URL)
- Not Modified (HTTP status code; indicates resource is unchanged)
- Use Proxy (HTTP status code)
- Switch Proxy (HTTP status code; obsolete)
- Temporary Redirect (HTTP status code; look elsewhere on that request only)
- 30 Seconds to Mars (band)
- Suspicious Vehicle (Alabama Public Safety Radio Code)
- Omaha Police Code for Indecent Exposure (band)
- Police Non-Emergency Service Request (Washington, DC)
Samples in periodicals archive:
based upon his readings in (primarily French) social psychology, he suggests that in early modern Europe, culture offered "multiple references and multiple choices," which permitted individuals to "play simultaneously" on "several fields of commitment.