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This page contains shared images used throughout the Confluence Site and other technical documentation.

Notes & Guidelines:

  • Don't remove, replace, or delete images. Instead, add new ones. These images are intended to be stable, so changes can break a reference far, far away.
  • Consider keeping original file names, even if obscure. If you're uploading a genuinely new image, name it something sensible. However, when uploading marcom or other "existing" images not directly created for technology documentation, keep the existing image name. This helps connect broken references we may find later if other material doesn't point to a stable file location.  

Contents:

Table of Contents
maxLevel1


Ed-Fi Logos


White letters, for black background.








Square, for social media / large use.



Ed-Fi Marcom Images



Used as "Community" signifier in previous Ed-Fi.org material.

Used as "Vendor" signifier in previous Ed-Fi.org material.


Ed-Fi Product Icons & Images


Technical Suite Three Icons (and other current material)











Technical Suite Two Icons










Technical Suite One Icons (and other first-generation material)




Old Friends




How To Reference These Images


You can copy the image while not in Edit Mode on this page. That will create a copy in the target Confluence page. That may be fine for some circumstances, but the link to this stable original will be lost
  • In Confluence/Tech Docs. If you're referencing one of these images in Confluence, you can copy the image :
    • Copy the image macro from this page in Confluence's Edit Mode and
    place
    • paste it into a new page, or simply right-click the image to copy-and-paste it into another Confluence page. Resizing the image in the new location won't change the properties here. This will create a copy attached to the page you're working with. This is desirable when you don't need to reference this original image.
    • You can also reference the image by file
    name using an Image Macro.
Info
    • name by dropping a new Image Macro into a page and searching for the image file name. This is desirable when you want the page you're working with to refer to the original on this page.
  • External Documents. In other documents such as the Ed-Fi Timeline, you may need a URL. Most browsers allow you to right-click and "Copy Image Address" or similar. In other browsers, it's easier to right-click and use the "Open image in new tab" command and copy the URL from the address bar. The URL is publicly available and should be stable, even following Confluence upgrades.