Restore an earlier version of a spreadsheet in Numbers on Mac. Every time you save a spreadsheet, Numbers saves it as a new version. As a result, you can browse earlier versions, save a copy of an earlier version, or restore a spreadsheet to an earlier version. Learn how to download previous versions of non-subscription apps such as Acrobat, Photoshop Elements, Creative Suite 5, 5.5, and 6, or Adobe Premiere Elements. If you purchased your apps from a store or an online retailer, you must first register them.
You can download and activate eligible previousversions of Autodesk software. Eligible previous versions varyaccording to whether you have a subscription, a maintenance plan,or an education license.
- Subscription - See which products are eligiblefrom the Eligible previous versions - subscriptions
- Maintenance plan - See which products areeligible from the Eligible previous versions - maintenance plans.
- Education license - Most education productsare eligible for the newest version and up to three versions back.If your license has expired, you can download the newest version ofthat software from the Education Community. If you need to use theolder, expired version, contact an Autodesk reseller to learn aboutpurchase options. See Extend Autodesk educational licenses for details.
How to download a previous version of Autodesk software
Important note for students and educators: Ifyou have an education license, don't use thisprocedure. Go to the EducationCommunity site to see which versions are available to you.
- Sign in to your account at manage.autodesk.com.
Note: You don't need to uninstall the currentversion of the product. - Locate your product in the list of Products & Services andclick View downloads.
Note: For industry collections or AutoCADincluding specialized toolsets, click View items to downloadindividual products. - Select a previous version from the Version menu and downloadthe software.
See also
Debian always has at leastthree releases in active maintenance: stable
, testing
andunstable
.
The stable
distribution contains the latest officially released distribution of Debian.
This is the production release of Debian, the one which we primarily recommend using.
The current stable
distribution of Debian is version 10, codenamed buster.It was initially released as version 10 on July 6th, 2019 and its latest update, version 10.9, was released on March 27th, 2021.
The testing
distribution contains packages that haven't been accepted into a stable
release yet, but they are in the queue for that. The main advantage of using this distribution is that it has more recent versions of software.
See the Debian FAQ for more information on what is testing
and how it becomes stable
.
The current testing
distribution is bullseye.
The unstable
distribution is where active development of Debian occurs. Generally, this distribution is run by developers and those who like to live on the edge. It is recommended that users running unstable should subscribe to the debian-devel-announce mailing list to receive notifications of major changes, for example upgrades that may break.
The unstable
distribution is always called sid.
Release life cycle
Debian announces its new stable release on a regular basis. Users can expect 3 years of full support for each release and 2 years of extra LTS support.
See Debian Releases Wiki page and Debian LTS Wiki page for detailed information.
Index of releases
- The next release of Debian is codenamed
bullseye
—testing
, no release date has been set - Debian 10 (
buster
) — currentstable
release - Debian 9 (
stretch
) —oldstable
release, under LTS support - Debian 8 (
jessie
) —oldoldstable
release, under extended LTS support - Debian 7 (
wheezy
) — obsolete stable release - Debian 6.0 (
squeeze
) — obsolete stable release - Debian GNU/Linux 5.0 (
lenny
) — obsolete stable release - Debian GNU/Linux 4.0 (
etch
) — obsolete stable release - Debian GNU/Linux 3.1 (
sarge
) — obsolete stable release - Debian GNU/Linux 3.0 (
woody
) — obsolete stable release - Debian GNU/Linux 2.2 (
potato
) — obsolete stable release - Debian GNU/Linux 2.1 (
slink
) — obsolete stable release - Debian GNU/Linux 2.0 (
hamm
) — obsolete stable release
The web pages for the obsolete Debian releases are kept intact, butthe releases themselves can only be found in a separatearchive.
See the Debian FAQ for an explanation ofwhereall these codenames came from.
Integrity of the data in the releases
Download Old Version Of Numbers App
Data integrity is granted by a digitally signed Release
file. To ensure that all files in the release belong to it, checksums ofall Packages
files are copied into the Release
file.
Download Old Version Of Numbers Download
Digital signatures for this file are stored in the fileRelease.gpg
, using the current version of the archive signingkey. For stable
and oldstable
an additional signature isgenerated using an offline key specifically generated for a releaseby a member of the Stable Release Team.