Budget In Brief application is used by budget analysts and enterprise solution integrators in creating and manipulating budget data. It automates the production of budget documents through the use of any word processing software, to make documents which are ready for publication. It provides solutions by combining financial information, exhibits, reports, and narrative and media documents which are suitable for any kind of budget submissions that adapts to the latest organizational standards. Budget In Brief supports budget formulation for any internal submission. It provides support for the following platforms: Windows XP, Windows Vista and Windows 7 and is a prerequisite to Microsoft .Net Framework 3.5 and Microsoft .Net Framework 4.0. But, Budget in Brief is an independent solution and does not need Microsoft Office to produce documents. It stands alone in providing all the tools needed for producing office files. When the Budget in Brief application was created, it went through a series of tests during its development. Some of these tests were automated, and others were tested by the testing team to ensure functionality.
Notepad is a basic text editor used to create plain documents. It is commonly used to view or edit text (.txt) files, and a simple tool for creating Web pages, and supports only the basic formatting in HTML documents. It also has a simple built-in logging function. Each time a file that initializes with .log is opened, the program inserts a text timestamp on the last line of the file. It accepts text from the Windows clipboard. This is helpful in stripping embedded font type and style codes from formatted text, such as when copying text from a Web page and pasting into an email message or other “What You See Is What You Get†text editor. The formatted text is temporarily pasted into Notepad, and then immediately copied again in stripped format to be pasted into the other program. Simple text editors like Notepad may be utilized to change text with markup, such as HTML. Early versions of Notepad offered only the most basic functions, such as finding text. Newer versions of Windows include an updated version of Notepad with a search and replace function (Ctrl + H), as well as Ctrl + F for search and similar keyboard shortcuts. It makes use of a built-in window class named edit. In older versions such as Windows 95, Windows 98, Windows Me and Windows 3.1, there is a 64k limit on the size of the file being edited, an operating system limit of the EDIT class.