Reproduced from the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization website
The State of Food and Agriculture 1998
ANNEX TABLES
COUNTRIES AND TERRITORIES USED
FOR STATISTICAL PURPOSES
Developed
countries |
Countries
in transition |
Developing Countries
|
Sub-Saharan
Africa |
Asia and
the Pacific/
Far East
and Oceania |
Latin America
and the
Caribbean |
Near East
and
North Africa |
Albania |
Albania |
Angola |
American Samoa |
Anguilla |
Afghanistan |
Andorra |
|
Benin |
Bangladesh |
Antigua
and Barbuda |
Algeria |
Armenia |
Armenia |
Botswana |
Bhutan |
Argentina |
Bahrain |
Australia |
|
Burkina Faso |
British Virgin
Islands |
Aruba |
Cyprus |
Austria |
|
Burundi |
Brunei
Darussalam |
Bahamas |
Egypt |
Azerbaijan |
Azerbaijan |
Cameroon |
Cambodia |
Barbados |
Gaza Strip |
Belarus |
Belarus |
Cape Verde |
China |
Belize |
Iran, Islamic Rep. |
Belgium/Luxembourg |
|
Central African Rep. |
Cocos Islands |
Bermuda |
Iraq |
Bosnia and
Herzegovina |
Bosnia and
Herzegovina |
Chad |
Cook Islands |
Bolivia |
Jordan |
Bulgaria |
Bulgaria |
Comoros |
East Timor |
Brazil |
Kwait |
Canada |
|
Congo |
Fiji |
Cayman Islans |
Lebanon |
Croatia |
Croatia |
Cote d'Ivorie |
French Polinesia |
Chile |
Libyan Arab
Jamahiriya |
Czech Republic |
Czech Republic |
Democratic Republic
of the Congo |
Guam |
Colombia |
Morocco |
Denmark |
|
Djibouti |
India |
Costa Rica |
Oman |
Estonia |
Estonia |
Equatorial
guinea |
Indonesia |
Cuba |
Qatar |
Faerohe Islands |
|
Eritrea |
Kiribati |
Dominica |
Saudi Arabia |
Finland |
|
Ethiopia |
Korea, dem.
People's Rep. |
Dominican Rep. |
Sirian Arab rep. |
France |
|
Gabon |
Korea, rep. |
Ecuador |
Tunisia |
Georgia |
Georgia |
Gambia |
Lao People's
Dem. Rep. |
El Salvador |
Turkey |
Germany |
|
Ghana |
Macau |
Falkland
Islands
(Malvinas) |
United
Arab Emirates |
Gibraltar |
|
Guinea |
Malaysia |
French
Guyana |
West Bank |
Greece |
|
Guinea Bissau |
Maldives |
Grenada |
Yemen |
Greenland |
|
Kenya |
Marshall Islands |
Guadeloupe |
|
Hungary |
Hungary |
Lesotho |
Micronesia,
Fed. States |
Guatemala |
|
Iceland |
|
Liberia |
Mongolia |
Guyana |
|
Ireland |
|
Madagascar |
Myanmar |
Haiti |
|
Israel |
|
Malawi |
Nauru |
Honduras |
|
Italy |
|
Mali |
Nepal |
Jamaica |
|
Japan |
|
Mauritania |
New Caledonia |
Martinique |
|
Kazakhstan |
Kazakhstan |
Mauritius |
Niue |
Mexico |
|
Kyrgyzstan |
Kyrgyzstan |
Mozambique |
Norfolk Islands |
Montserrat |
|
Latvia |
Latvia |
Namibia |
Northen Mariana
Islands |
Netherlands
Antilles |
|
Lichtenstein |
|
Niger |
Pakistan |
Nicaragua |
|
Lithuania |
Lithuania |
Nigeria |
Palau |
Panama |
|
Malta |
|
Réunion |
Papua
New Guinea |
Paraguay |
|
Monaco |
|
Rwanda |
Philippines |
Peru |
|
Netherlands |
|
Saint Helena |
Samoa |
Puerto Rico |
|
New Zeland |
|
Sao Tome
and Principe |
Singapore |
Saint Kitts
and Nevis |
|
Norway |
|
Senegal |
Solomon
Islands |
Saint Lucia |
|
Poland |
Poland |
Seychelles |
Sri Lanka |
Saint Vincent
and the
Grenadines |
|
Portugal |
|
Sierra Leone |
Tahiwan
Province
of China |
Suriname |
|
Republic
of Moldova |
Republic
of Moldova |
Somalia |
Thailand |
Trinidad
and Tobago |
|
Romania |
Romania |
Sudan |
Tokelau |
Turks and
Caicos Islands |
|
Russian
Federation |
Russian
Federation |
Swaziland |
Tonga |
United States
Virgin Islands |
|
San Marino
Slovakia
Slovenia |
Slovakia
Slovenia |
Togo
Uganda
United Republic
of Tanzania |
Vanuatu
Vietnam
Wallis and
Futuna Islands |
Venezuela
Uruguay
|
|
Saint Pierre
and Miquelon |
|
Zambia |
Tuvalu |
|
|
South Africa |
|
Zimbabwe |
|
|
|
Spain |
|
|
|
|
|
Sweden |
|
|
|
|
|
Switzerland |
|
|
|
|
|
Tajikistan |
Tajikistan |
|
|
|
|
The Former
Yugoslav
Republic of
Macedonia |
The Former
Yugoslav
Republic of
Macedonia |
|
|
|
|
Turkmenistan |
Turkmenistan |
|
|
|
|
Ukraine |
Ukraine |
|
|
|
|
United Kingdom |
|
|
|
|
|
United States |
|
|
|
|
|
Uzbekistan |
Uzbekistan |
|
|
|
|
Yugoslavia |
Yugoslavia |
|
|
|
|
Special Chapter
In addition to the usual review of the recent world food and agricultural situation, each
issue of this report since 1957 has included one or more special studies on problems of
longer-term interest. Special chapters in earlier issues have covered the following
subjects:
1957 Factors influencing the trend of food consumption
Postwar changes in some institutional factors affecting agriculture
1958 Food and agricultural developments in Africa south of the Sahara
The growth of forest industries and their impact on the worlds forests
1959 Agricultural incomes and levels of living in countries at different stages
of economic development
Some general problems of agricultural development in less-developed countries in the
light of postwar experience
1960 Programming for agricultural development
1961 Land reform and institutional change
Agricultural extension, education and research in Africa, Asia and Latin America
1962 The role of forest industries in the attack on economic underdevelopment
The livestock industry in less-developed countries
1963 Basic factors affecting the growth of productivity in agriculture
Fertilizer use: spearhead of agricultural development
1964 Protein nutrition: needs and prospects
Synthetics and their effects on agricultural trade
1966 Agriculture and industrialization
Rice in the world food economy
1967 Incentives and disincentives for farmers in developing countries
The management of fishery resources
1968 Raising agricultural productivity in developing countries through
technological improvement
Improved storage and its contribution to world food supplies
1969 Agricultural marketing improvement programmes: some lessons from recent
experience
Modernizing institutions to promote forestry development
1970 Agriculture at the threshold of the Second Development Decade
1971 Water pollution and its effects on living aquatic resources and fisheries
1972 Education and training for development
Accelerating agricultural research in the developing countries
1973 Agricultural employment in developing countries
1974 Population, food supply and agricultural development
1975 The Second United Nations Development Decade: mid-term review and appraisal
1976 Energy and agriculture
1977 The state of natural resources and the human environment for food and
agriculture
1978 Problems and strategies in developing regions
1979 Forestry and rural development
1980 Marine fisheries in the new era of national jurisdiction
1981 Rural poverty in developing countries and means of poverty alleviation
1982 Livestock production: a world perspective
1983 Women in developing agriculture
1984 Urbanization, agriculture and food systems
1985 Energy use in agricultural production
Environmental trends in food and agriculture
Agricultural marketing and development
1986 Financing agricultural development
1987-88 Changing priorities for agricultural science and technology in
developing countries
1989 Sustainable development and natural resource management
1990 Structural adjustment and agriculture
1991 Agricultural policies and issues: lessons from the 1980s and prospects for
the 1990s
1992 Marine fisheries and the law of the sea: a decade of change
1993 Water policies and agriculture
1994 Forest development and policy dilemmas
1995 Agricultural trade: entering a new era?
1996 Food security: some macroeconomic dimensions
1997 The agroprocessing industry and economic development
SELECTED PUBLICATIONS
FAO Agricultural Policy and Economic
Development Series
AGRICULTURE AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ANALYSIS
DIVISION
AND POLICY ASSISTANCE DIVISION
1 Searching for common ground European Union enlargement and agricultural
policy
(K. Hathaway and D. Hathaway, eds, 1997)
2 Agricultural and rural development policy in Latin America New directions
and new
challenges (A. de Janvry, N. Key and E. Sadoulet, 1997)
3 Food security strategies The Asian experience (P. Timmer, 1997)
4 Guidelines for the integration of sustainable agriculture and rural development
into
agricultural policies (J.B. Hardaker, 1997)
In preparation
Farm/non-farm linkages and income diversification in the developing countries:
case studies in Africa and Latin America (T. Reardon and K. Stamoulis, eds)
The role of agriculture in the transition to a market economy (K. Stamoulis and
K. Frohberg, eds)
FAO Economic and Social Development Papers
AGRICULTURE AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ANALYSIS
DIVISION*
65 Agricultural stabilization and structural adjustment policies in developing
countries (A.H. Sarris, 1987)
66 Agricultural issues in structural adjustment programs (R.D. Norton, 1987)
84 Measures of protection: methodology, economic interpretation and policy
relevance (P.L. Scandizzo, 1989)
90 The impact of stabilization and structural adjustment policies on the rural
sector case-studies of Côte dIvoire, Senegal, Liberia, Zambia and Morocco
(P. Salin and E.-M. Claassen, 1991)
95 Guidelines for monitoring the impact of structural adjustment programmes on the
agricultural sector (A.H. Sarris, 1990)
96 The effects of trade and exchange rate policies on production incentives in
agriculture (C. Kirkpatrick and D. Diakosavvas, 1990)
98 Institutional changes in agricultural products and input markets and their
impact on agricultural performance (A. Thomson, 1991)
99 Agricultural labour markets and structural adjustment in sub-Saharan Africa
(L.D. Smith, 1991)
100 Structural adjustment and household welfare in rural areas a
micro-economic perspective (R. Gaiha, 1991)
103 The impact of structural adjustment on smallholders (J.-M. Boussard, 1992)
104 Structural adjustment policy sequencing in sub-Saharan Africa (L.D. Smith and
N. Spooner, 1991)
105 The role of public and private agents in the food and agricultural sectors of
developing countries (L.D. Smith and A. Thomson, 1991)
107 Land reform and structural adjustment in sub-Saharan Africa: controversies and
guidelines (J.-Ph. Platteau, 1992). French version: Réforme agraire et ajustement
structurel en Afrique subsaharienne: controverses et orientations
110 Agricultural sustainability: definition and implications for agricultural and
trade policy (T. Young, 1992)
115 Design of poverty alleviation strategy in rural areas (R. Gaiha, 1993)
121 Policies for sustainable development: four essays (A. Markandya, 1994)
124 Structural adjustment and agriculture: African and Asian experiences (A. de
Janvry and E. Sadoulet, 1994)
125 Transition and price stabilization policies in East European agriculture (E.-M.
Claassen, 1994)
128 Agricultural taxation under structural adjustment (A.H. Sarris, 1994)
131 Trade patterns, cooperation and growth (P.L. Scandizzo, 1995)
132 The economics of international agreements for the protection of environmental
and agricultural services (S. Barrett, 1996)
133 Implications of regional trade arrangements for agricultural trade (T. Josling,
1997)
134 Rural informal credit markets and the effectiveness of policy reform (A.H.
Sarris, 1996)
135 International dynamics of national sugar policies (T.C. Earley and D.W.
Westfall, 1996)
136 Growth theories, old and new, and the role of agriculture in economic
development (N.S. Stern, 1996)
138 Economic development and environmental policy (S. Barrett, 1997)
139 Population pressure and management of natural resources. An economic analysis
of traditional management of small-scale fishing (J.-M. Baland and J.-Ph. Platteau, 1996)
141 Economies in transition Hungary and Poland (D.G. Johnson, 1997)
142 The political economy of the Common Market in milk and dairy products in the
European Union (R.E. Williams, 1997)
Halting degradation of natural resources. Is there a role for rural communities?
(J.-M. Baland
and J.-Ph. Platteau, 1996). Published by Oxford University Press
* Note: Up to 1996, these papers were published by the former Policy Analysis Division.
In preparation
Growth, trade and agriculture: an investigative survey (P.L. Scandizzo and M.
Spinedi)
Rural poverty, risk and development (M. Fafchamps)
To obtain the publications listed, please contact:
Sales and Marketing Group, Information Division
Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations
Viale delle Terme di Caracalla
00100 Rome, Italy
E-mail: publications-sales@fao.org
Tel.: (39 06) 57051
Fax: (39 06) 5705 3360
TIME SERIES FOR SOFA98 DISKETTE
Instructions for use
TIME SERIES FOR SOFA '98
DISKETTE
instruction for use
As in the past years, The State of Food and Agriculture 1998 includes a computer
diskette containing time series data for about 150 countries and the necessary software,
FAOSTAT TS, to access and display these data.
FAOSTAT TS
FAOSTAT TS software provides quick and easy access to structured annual time series
databases. Even inexperienced computer users can use FAOSTAT TS, which does not require
spreadsheet, graphics or database programs. FAOSTAT TS is fully menu-driven, so there are
no commands to learn. Users can browse through and print graphs and tables, plot
multiple-line graphs, fit trend lines and export data for use in other programs. FAOSTAT
TS is trilingual (English, French, Spanish) and uses a standard menu format.
FAOSTAT TS software is in the public domain and may be freely distributed. The data files
accompanying the software, however, are under FAO copyright, and users must attribute FAO
as the source. FAO may provide only very limited support to users of this software and the
accompanying data and cannot assist users who modify the software or data files. FAO
disclaims all warrants of fitness for the software or data for a particular use.
Technical requirements
FAOSTAT TS software requires an IBM or compatible PC with a hard disk, DOS 3.0 or later
version, 300 KB of available RAM and graphics capability. Graphics support is provided for
all common graphics adapters (VGA, EGA, MCGA, CGA and Hercules monochrome).
FAOSTAT TS will print graphs on Epson dot matrix, Hewlett-Packard and compatible laser
printers. To use FAOSTAT TS with other printers, users can enable their own graphics
printing utility before starting the program. One such utility is GRAPHICS.COM in DOS 2.0
or later version.
Because of its use of DOS graphics modes, if FAOSTAT TS is run under MS-Windows or OS/2,
it should be set to run in a full screen DOS session.
Installation
Before running FAOSTAT TS you must install the software and data files on your hard
disk. Installation is automated through the INSTALL.BAT utility on the diskette.
To install from drive A: to drive C:
- Insert the diskette in drive A:
- Type A: and press ENTER.
- Type INSTALL C: and press ENTER.
- Press any key.
A C:\SOFA98 directory is created and, after installation, you will already be in this
directory.
Entering FAOSTAT TS
To start the FAOSTAT TS software, if you are not already in the C:\SOFA98
directory (as after installation):
- Change to this directory by typing CD\SOFA98 and pressing ENTER.
- From the command prompt in the SOFA98 directory, type SOFA98 and press ENTER.
A graphics title screen will be displayed, followed by the main menu screen.
If FAOSTAT TS does not start, graphs do not display correctly or the menus are difficult
to read, your computer may not be compatible with the default functions of FAOSTAT TS. The
use of a command-line option may help. You may try to start FAOSTAT TS with the -E
parameter (by typing SOFA98-E) to disable its use of expanded memory. You may also
force the use of a particular graphics or text mode by typing its name as a parameter
(e.g. -EGA would force the use of EGA mode graphics).
Language choices
The initial default language for FAOSTAT TS is English. To change the default language
to French or Spanish:
- Go to the FILE menu.
- Select LANGUAGE using the ARROW key (arrow down) and pressing ENTER.
- Select your choice of language and press ENTER.
The language selected will remain the default language until another is selected.
Navigating the menus
The main menu bar consists of FILE, DATA, GRAPH, TABLE and HELP menus. Most menu
options are disabled until you open a data file. Navigate the menus by using the ARROW
keys (arrows up, arrows down, arrows left, arrows right) and make a selection by
highlighting an item and pressing ENTER. To back out of a selection, press the ESC
key.
If you have a mouse, menu items can be selected with the mouse cursor. The left
mouse button selects an item and the right mouse button acts as the ESC key.
After you have made a menu selection, the menu will redraw and highlight a possible next
choice.
Several short-cut keys are available throughout the program:
Key Action
F1 HELP:
Displays context-sensitive help text.
ESC ESCAPE: Backs out of
the current menu choice or exits the current graph or table.
ALT+N NOTES: Displays text notes associated with the
current data file, if the text file is available. This text may be edited. Notes will not
appear while a graph is displayed.
ALT+X, ALT+Q EXIT: Exits FAOSTAT TS immediately, without
prompting.
Help
You will see context-sensitive help displayed at the bottom of each screen.
Press F1 for more extensive help on a highlighted option.
Select HELP from the main menu to access the help information. Introductory
information on the software, help topics and an About summary screen are
available from the HELP menu.
The HELP menu options call up the same windows obtained by pressing the F1
key at any of the menu screens:
- FAOSTAT TS displays the top-level help page.
- TOPICS lists the help contents.
- ABOUT shows summary program information.
Opening a data file
To display a list of FAOSTAT TS data files:
- Go to the FILE menu.
- Select OPEN.
All of the FAOSTAT TS data files in the current directory are displayed. Initially, only
SOFA98 will be present. Other FAOSTAT PC data files, version 3.0, can be used with FAOSTAT
TS.
Use the ARROW keys to highlight the file you wish to view and press ENTER
to select it. Files are shown with the date of their last revision. You can also highlight
your choice by typing the first letters of the file name. The current search string will
appear in the lower left corner of the list.
You can change the default data drive and directory from the file list by selecting
the directory or drive of your choice.
If a current data file is open, loading in a new file will return FAOSTAT TS to its
defaults (time trend, no trend line, no user-specified units or scalar). Only one file can
be loaded at a time.
Once you have made a file selection, all the menu selections are activated.
Selecting a data series
Use the DATA menu to select or modify a data series or to fit a
statistical trend.
Select a data series by choosing the name of a country and a data element from
scrolling menus. The first entry displays a list of country names, the second entry
displays a list of data item names and the third displays a list of data element names.
If you type the first letters of a name in a list, the menu selection bar will jump to the
matching name. For example:
- Type NEW to skip to New Zealand.
- Press ENTER to select the highlighted name
Displaying graphs and graph options
The GRAPH menu allows you to view the data in chart form. You can display time
trends and table or column profiles. Options under the GRAPH menu change the data
series shown as well as its display.
For example, to show a plot of the data selected:
- Go to the GRAPH menu.
- Select DISPLAY.
Many options to modify, save or print a graph are available only while the graph is
on-screen. Remember to use the F1 help key for a reminder of your options.
Graph action keys. You have several options when a graph is displayed:
Press ESC to exit the graph and return to the main menu.
Press F1 for help on the graph action keys. The help box lists the choices
available while a graph is on-screen. You must exit the help box before making a
selection.
Press the ARROW and (arrow up, arrow down) PAGEUP, PAGEDOWN
keys to change the series displayed.
The plus key (+) allows you to add from one to three additional series to the one
displayed. Press the MINUS key (-) to remove a series. To create a multiline chart:
- Display an initial series.
- Press the + key to add subsequent series to the chart.
Press A to display a table of the axis data with statistics. Press T to show
a table of the fitted trend data, the residuals and fit statistics (if a trend line is
selected, see below).
The INS key permits you to insert text directly on the graph. While
inserting text, press F1 for help on your text options. You can type small or
large, horizontal or vertical text.
To print a graph, press P and select your choice of printer from the menu.
The print output is only a screen dump of the display, so the quality is limited.
To save a graph for later printing or viewing, press S. The graph image will
be saved in the common PCX bitmap format. You can use the PRINTPCX program or other
software to view or print multiple images later. PRINTPCX also permits you to convert
colour PCX images into black and white images suitable for inclusion in a word processing
document.
Fitting trend lines
To fit a statistical function to a data series, select FIT from the DATA
menu. The options under FIT allow you to select the type of function, data year
limits to include in the fit and a final projection year for a statistical forecast.
By fitting a trend line (selecting the option under FIT) with a projection
(selecting PROJECTION under FIT), a statistical forecast can be plotted. Use
the + key to add a new data series to the graph, which can be made with only a few key
strokes.
Charting profiles
The options under the GRAPH menu allow you to change the year span or style of
the graph display (options LIMITS and STYLE, respectively), or to switch
from a time trend to a table or column data profile (VIEWPOINT). The VIEWPOINT
option is an easy means to compare data for a particular year.
Viewpoint
If you want to change from a time series display to a country or item profile
display for a given year, select VIEWPOINT from the GRAPH menu. Select DISPLAY
from the GRAPH menu, and the profile will be drawn. The initial profile display is
for the last year of historical data. To change the year, use the ARROW (arrow up, arrow
down) keys. Press F1 for help.
For a tables profile (profile of data across countries), you can either choose the
tables to be displayed or let FAOSTAT TS select the top members and array them in order.
A limit of 50 items can appear in one profile. By selecting TOP MEMBERS instead of SELECTED
MEMBERS, FAOSTAT TS will sort the values in the file and display a ranking of table or
column values.
Viewing tables
The TABLE menu allows you to look at data in a tabular format and to
define subset tables that may be saved and imported into other software packages.
- Go to the TABLE menu.
- Select BROWSE DATA to view individual data tables from the current file.
When viewing tables, a help bar appears at the bottom of the screen. Press PAGEUP
or PAGEDOWN to change the table displayed or press ALT+1 or ALT+2 to
choose from a list of tables. Use the ARROW keys (arrow up, arrow down, arrow left, arrow
right) to scroll the columns and rows.
Series data
The SERIES DATA option under the TABLE menu displays the last data
series selected, including summary statistics. This is the series used to plot a graph. To
change the series, you must make a new choice from the DATA menu.
The SERIES DATA screen can also be displayed while you are in a graph by
pressing the letter A. If more than one series has been plotted, only the last
series is shown. The range of years used for the series and statistics can be adjusted
through the LIMITS option under the GRAPH menu.
To view country or item profile lists and statistics, select VIEWPOINT from
the GRAPH. You can quickly see a list of the tables with the greatest values (for
example, countries with the highest commodity consumption) by choosing a table profile
from VIEWPOINT and selecting the TOPMEMBERS option. Then select SERIES
DATA from the TABLE menu to view the list, or select DISPLAY from the GRAPH
menu to plot a chart.
Trend data
If the FIT option has been selected (from the DATA menu) for a
time trend, then the values composing the trend can be displayed with the TREND DATA
option. Summary statistics for the original series and for the trend as well as residual
values are included. The list scrolls with the ARROW keys, and you can toggle
between the axis and trend data with the A and T keys.
Exporting data
The EXPORT option under the FILE menu allows you to export FAOSTAT
TS data into other file formats or to create custom tables for viewing or printing. By
selecting EXPORT, you will jump into another set of menus.
To select the tables and columns you want to view or save, go to the DATA
menu. You must mark your choice of options with the + key. To undo all your selections
quickly, select RESET MARKS.
To arrange, view, save or print data, go to the options under EXPORT (in the
FILE menu):
- FAO TABLE creates a table with data from the last four available years.
- VIEW displays a temporary text file of the data selected. It is a convenient way
to view a subset of the tables and columns in a FAOSTAT TS file and can also be used to
see the effects of the ORIENTATION or LAYOUT selections before using the SAVE
or PRINT option.
- SAVE displays a list of file formats to let you save your data choices in a file.
You will be prompted for a file name. If you need to export FAOSTAT TS data for use with
other software, use this menu item. The WK1 and DBF file format selections are not
affected by the LAYOUT options (see below).
- PRINT prints your current table and column selections. Many printers cannot print
more than five columns of FAOSTAT TS data. Select VIEW to check the table width
before printing.
- LAYOUT allows you to display years across rows or down columns. The default
direction is down columns.
To get back to the main FAOSTAT TS menu or to clear your selections and create more
tables, go to the RETURN option.
Making notes
To read or edit textual information on the current data file, select NOTES
from the FILE menu. You can also call up the Notes box by pressing ALT+N at
any of the menus. The option NOTES allows you to read or edit text associated with
the data file.
DOS shell and exit
The DOS SHELL option under the FILE menu returns you to the DOS prompt
temporarily but keeps FAOSTAT TS in memory. This is not the normal way to exit the
program. It is useful if you need to execute a DOS command and would like to return to the
same data file. The data file itself is dropped from memory and reloaded on return, so
default values will be in effect.
Exiting FAOSTAT TS
To exit FAOSTAT TS:
- Go to the FILE menu .
- Select EXIT.
The Alt+X or Alt+Q key combinations are short cuts to exit the program from almost any
screen.
|