Is there a way to invoke gentran server to translate a EDI 837 file to a custom format thru a batch script. thanks for your help.
I haven't used GENTRAN:Server for several years, so please excuse any fuzziness on my part.
I think there is an executable called unattend.exe that you can use to execute session files. I believe you can call it from a batch file like this:
c:\pathname\unattend.exe c:\session file pathname\sessionname.ses
More recent versions might have something better, but this might be worth a try.
Related
I have an ActiveX which seems to look for a file when starting. The problem is that the error doesn't give me any clue about which file it cannot access.
The msgbox is : The system cannot find the file specified
How can I know which file it wanted to access? Which tool can I use to know that?
Thanks
You can use Process Monitor from Sysinternals/Microsoft.
I have finished a rails project using i18n and now I need to pass all the text in the website to our client so that he can translate them and we can include additional locales to our app.
The problem is our client is not a geek and if we give them the actual YAML file, they will use MS Word to edit it and we'll lose all the proper markup in the process ("\n" for new lines, one line text, etc...).
How would you handle this process?
Is there a better way than giving the client a .doc file and then loosing a day to clean the text afterwards and manually converting it back to YAML?
Thanks in advance,
Augusto
This is exactly what Locale was created for : you upload your YAML files, your client/translator edits the content and you sync YAML back down. You don't email files and you don't have to deal with crappy file formats - check it out!
Full disclosure : I co-founded and develop Locale.
This sounds like a one-off thing where I you do the translation once and then be done with it.
What we do in these cases (we usually work with a Translator for these kinds of things) is that we export all the keys in the YAML to Excel and send them that.
Once we get it back we usually task a intern with fixing up the yaml (after it's been translated back into YAML - we do this manually at the moment but a little script should be easy to implement)
Other solutions could be (if you do this a lot) that you include the translations into your app and enable through some JavaScript and maybe something similar to Aloha Editor the user to simply click on texts and translate them in the app. But that's a bit excessive and only makes sense if there are really a lot of translations to be done and you want to crowdsource them (Facebook did this back in the day)
I am getting file list in my Java program using list() method of File class. When I run my program on Knoppix I get ???? instead of Cyrillic file names. It seems that problem is in knoppix, not java. I tried to use options for mounting file system, such as nls and iocharset, but it has no effect (or may be I use it in wrong way). Somebody can help me?
I think that problem is as you said with Knoppix. Probably you do not have Cyrillic font bundled, so there is no way to display these code points.
If you want to fix this, you will need fix distribution, as there is nothing wrong with the program. I am not sure if this is the question for https://serverfault.com/ or https://superuser.com/, but you can read their FAQ's and ask how to fix it there (probably you will need to re-create Knoppix distribution).
Windows Live Messenger creates a number of files like
C:\Users\USERNAME\AppData\Local\Microsoft\Windows Live Contacts{ae86acef-5a45-4447-bc32-521fc9289e1a}\DBStore\contacts.edb
and stores contacts within. When looking on such files, it is obviouos that they have strict structure. However, I failed to find the description of contacts.edb structure in internet.
Does anybody knows this structure? Or maybe there are some parser sources available? (I do not need a exe for that, I know about NirSoft one).
There is a project called libesedb which might be of use here.
The contacts.edb file is an ESEBD file.
Sometimes when I add a new file to my path, I have to restart MATLAB or it won't be detected. There must be an other way to this!
I have experienced similar problems (Matlab does not notice it when I change a file). Unfortunately, I have no idea what causes it or how to solve it. I usually find that CLEAR ALL solves the problem, but be aware that it clears all variables in the work space. Some 'REHASH' command (e.g., REHASH TOOLBOXRESET) may also be useful.
I'd love to see a better answer; all documentation that I came across seems to indicate that this cannot happen.
Perhaps this is a problem with Matlab caching certain files at startup to improve performance. This happens with files in certain directories.
From Matlab help for path command:
Note (...) Also note that locations of files in the matlabroot/toolbox directory tree are loaded and cached in memory at the beginning of each MATLAB session to improve performance. If you save files to matlabroot/toolbox directories using an external editor or add or remove files from these directories using file system operations, run rehash toolbox before you use the files in the current session. If you make changes to existing files in matlabroot/toolbox directories using an external editor, run clear functionname before you use the files in the current session. For more information, see the rehash reference page or the Toolbox Path Caching topic in the MATLAB Desktop Tools and Development Environment documentation
I've often seen this happen with networked file locations. I don't understand the mechanism, but it definitely happens. A solution that often works:
path(path);
or, if that fails to pick it up, try this: (NB, this will clear your workspace)
clear classes;
path(path);
We did this last one so much, we put it in script on our common code path called:
shazaam;
Yes, my age is showing.
You want the "rehash" function or you need to set the path again using "path(path)" or similar. It also depends on whether you're using a "frozen" path. Look at the help for ADDPATH.
MATLAB will keep a cached copy of the compiled M-file unless it know that you've changed it. If you've created the file or you've edited it outside of MATLAB, then it may not know that it's changed.
This happens to me when the networked drive connection is lost then restored. rehash does not work but rehash toolboxreset does