XML Copy Editor es un editor de documentos XML libre (GPL 2.0) y multiplataforma cuya página web es https://xml-copy-editor.sourceforge.io/.
La última versión disponible actualmente (mayo de 2023) es la versión XML Copy Editor 1.3.1.0 (del 8 de octubre de 2022). Enlace de descarga para Windows (64 bits): XML Copy Editor 1.3.1.0 (19,1 MB).
Nota: En caso de que esta versión dé problemas, se puede utilizar la versión XML Copy Editor 1.2.1.3 (del 6 de septiembre de 2014). Enlace de descarga para Windows (64 bits): XML Copy Editor 1.2.1.3 (9,5 MB).
En cdlibre.org hay una sección dedicada a editores XML libres, con información detallada sobre las últimas versiones publicadas para Windows.
Una vez descargado el instalador de XML Copy Editor, haciendo doble clic en él se inicia la instalación.
Nota: En la versión XML Copy Editor 1.2.0.7 y anteriores se podía elegir el navegador predeterminado de XML Copy Editor, independientemente del navegador predeterminado del sistema. Haciendo clic en Buscar se debía elegir el ejecutable del navegador.
La declaración xml indica el juego de caracteres del documento. El juego de caracteres que se utiliza en este curso es UTF-8:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
Se pueden utilizar otros juegos de caracteres, como ISO-8859-1 (Europeo occidental):
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
Es importante que el juego de caracteres que aparece en la declaración sea el juego de caracteres en que realmente está guardado el documento, porque si no el procesador XML puede tener problemas leyendo el documento.
XML Copy Editor tiene en cuenta el juego de caracteres indicado en la declaración. Si se modifica la declaración, al guardar el documento se guarda en el juego correspondiente. Pero hay que tener en cuenta que otros editores, como el bloc de notas de Windows, no lo hace.
Para comprobar si un documento está bien formado, se puede elegir el menú , hacer clic en el botón correspondiente, o pulsar la tecla F2.
Para comprobar si un documento es válido, se puede elegir el menú , hacer clic en el botón correspondiente, o pulsar la tecla F5.
Al crear un nuevo documento, XML Copy Editor no ofrece la posibilidad de crear una hoja de estilo css, pero se puede crear un nuevo documento XML, guardarlo con el nombre y extensión deseados (en el ejemplo, estilo.css), borrar la declaración XML y escribir la hoja de estilo. Para que se coloree el código, puede ser necesario recargar el documento (mediante el menú .
Joanie — 2nd Visit (GHS, New)
Joanie stepped off the elevator into the quiet hum of GHS’s new wing, the lights here softer, the floor tiles warmer than the old corridors she remembered. It had been three months since her first visit: a frantic, antiseptic blur of beeping monitors and unfamiliar faces. Today she carried a small paper bag with her knitting inside and a determination that felt more like a steady pulse than the nervous flutter that had led her here before.
Nurse Patel greeted her at the reception nook as if welcoming an old friend. “Back for round two?” she asked, sliding a clipboard across the counter. Joanie smiled, letting the words “second visit” settle into something less clinical and more like a chapter title.
The new wing smelled faintly of citrus and polished wood. Sunlight poured through high windows, catching on a living wall of green plants that softened the view of the parking lot. Joanie found her way to Room 308, the number on her wristband matching the one on the door. Inside, the bed was made with neatly folded linens, and beside it sat an armchair with a throw blanket — someone had paid attention to small comforts.
Her doctor, Dr. Morales, arrived with a tablet and a calm voice. They spoke plainly about test results: progress where it counted, a few stubborn markers that would need more time. Joanie listened, knitting without really looking at her needles, feeling small victories stitch themselves together. Dr. Morales asked about her home routine, if she’d been sleeping, eating, walking. Joanie found herself answering with anecdotes — the neighbor’s cat she’d been feeding, the new café that served tea with honey and no judgement. The doctor smiled at those details as if they were data points of hope.
A physical therapist named Omar stopped by for a quick mobility check. He had an easy laugh and a knack for turning exercises into games. “Let’s see if we can get that shoulder to cooperate,” he said, guiding Joanie through a movement that felt at once familiar and brand new. She surprised herself by completing it with less pain than she expected; the room seemed to applaud with the quiet, respectful hum of the HVAC. joanie 2nd visit ghs new
Between appointments, Joanie wandered the wing. There was a small library with donated paperbacks and a mural of a river painted in calming blues. She picked up a book on birds — an old habit of hers — and read a paragraph, then another, letting the words anchor her. A volunteer offered her a cup of chamomile and a smile; the volunteer’s name tag read “Ava,” and they exchanged a few minutes of easy conversation about books and weather as if resuming something paused, not beginning from scratch.
Mid-afternoon brought a visit from a social worker who discussed support groups and community resources. Joanie had resisted help at first, but something about the new wing’s gentle light and the straightforward kindness of the staff made saying yes feel possible. She signed up for a small weekly group that met in the courtyard — people sharing stories, knitting needles clicking together.
As the day wound down, Joanie sat by the window and watched clouds slide over the sun. The second visit hadn’t erased the memory of fear from the first, but it had shifted the shape of it. Fear had edges now; it wasn’t an ocean swallowing the shore. Progress, setbacks, new routines — these were not neatly packaged, but they felt manageable in a way they hadn’t before.
When Nurse Patel walked Joanie to the exit, she handed back the wristband and said, “See you next time.” Joanie tucked the band into her bag beside her knitting, a small talisman. Outside, the evening air smelled like cut grass and the promise of rain. Joanie walked to her car more slowly than before, as if relearning how to move in a body that had been renegotiated.
That night, at home, she placed the band on her nightstand. She picked up her needles and began to knit, each stitch a tiny affirmation — steady, forward, patient. The new wing at GHS had given her more than a treatment plan; it had offered a seam where life and recovery could be stitched together. Joanie thought of the group she’d joined, the bird book waiting on her shelf, the volunteer who’d recommended chamomile. She felt thread by thread the shape of a life being mended, and for the first time in a long while, she enjoyed the slow work of repair. Joanie — 2nd Visit (GHS, New) Joanie stepped
At the climax, Joanie has the headmaster at her mercy. The “new” moral mechanic forces you to choose:
As Joanie walked out of GHS with her follow-up labs scheduled and a smile on her face, she asked the front desk one question: “Is the third visit going to be even better?”
The answer? Yes. Because at GHS, every visit builds on the last. The second visit was the turning point—where “new” stopped meaning anxiety and started meaning advancement.
If you are due for a follow-up appointment, don’t judge your provider by the first visit. Judge them by the second. And if you are looking for a system that treats the second visit as a fresh start rather than a chore, ask your care team about the GHS model.
In healthcare, the most important step isn’t the first one. It’s the second. Key Scene: The Choice at the Clocktower At
Have you had a “Joanie moment” during your second visit to a clinic? Share your story in the comments below. For more patient journey insights, subscribe to the GHS newsletter.
By: Senior Lore Correspondent
If you’ve been following the arc since the first encounter, you already know that the name “Joanie” carries weight. Her initial debut at GHS (Grand High School / Global Heroes Sector) left fans with more questions than answers. Now, the wait is finally over. The hotly anticipated “Joanie 2nd Visit GHS New” update has dropped, and it is rewriting the rulebook on character development and world-building.
But what exactly makes this second visit so different? Is it just a cash-grab nostalgia tour, or does the “new” in the keyword signify a genuine narrative evolution? I spent the last 48 hours combing through the new dialogue trees, secret cutscenes, and environmental changes. Here is everything you need to know.