On Thu, Nov 17, 2016 at 11:49 AM, Paul Gilmartin <
[email protected]> wrote:

> On Thu, 17 Nov 2016 09:01:53 -0600, Bill Woodger wrote:
>
> >The only real problem with delimiters is when the delimiter can occur in
> the data. Often a good reason for avoiding commas. Tab can be good, as long
> as the data cannot contain tab (unlikely for Mainframe data).
> >
> >Delimiters in the data can be "protected" by enclosing the data of that
> field in double-quotes. This is only a genuine problem when the the "other
> end" can only process text-and-control-codes and when "any value is
> possible in the data". However, it can also be an issue due to "diktat" -
> "this delimiter must be used, otherwise the world will stop revolving".
> That's bad when the delimiter can appear in the data.
> >
> Monthly, another department publishes a .xlsx file which I wish to parse
> with a script.  I open it with LibreOffice and  export as .html and parse
> that with my script.  (Ugh!  The hard part is process documentation of
> the manual process.)  No problem with dodging delimiters.   .xml might
> be a better choice than .html, but I knew I was familiar with .html.
>
> WTF!?  Xcel can't export as .xml!?
>

​I guess that I'm the one who said that. Turns out, in the current
Office360 version, it _supposedly_ can. I say supposedly because it give an
error msg: Does not contain XML mappings. So, I guess it needs to be
specially formatted.​ In my particular case, if I needed to do this, I'd
use the R language along with the XLConnect package to read the
spreadsheet.


>
> --gil
>
>
-- 
Heisenberg may have been here.

Unicode: http://xkcd.com/1726/

Maranatha! <><
John McKown

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