![]() If you have fewer than a few hundred, you can probably "fix" them by hand faster than you could work out the regular expressions to try to do it with regular expressions in sed or whatever. If it's a one time need and you have control over the data, you could write something quick and dirty that grabs everything up to " N " (assuming you have no waypoints with an N surrounded by spaces) and then parsed and rearranged from there. Is there a format available to where I do not have to change anything around in the way I have the example? I know this is a long shot but I am new to this whole thing You could use formulas to add commas at the appropriate place, and then use gpsbabel. If, as Robert says, you can't fix it up, and/or it's a one-off and/or infrequent job, one option which you (or a mate) might be more familiar with, would be to use excel or some other spreadsheet program to massage the data into something more 'machine readable'. You should fix that, rather than trying to work around the mistake. Apart from the obvious mistake (the lack of commas) - that implies to me that you have some control over the output of what is creating that example. You said "this is the way I have set up the csv". I think you're talking way over Brent's head there Robert! > To unsubscribe, change list options, or see archives, visit: > will include endpoint security, mobile security and the latest in malware > threat landscape has changed and how IT managers can respond. > Exclusive live event will cover all the ways today's security and If you're converting many thousands, send me your data set for a Need for a small data set, it's unlikely you'll recover that developmentĬost. If you have fewer than a few hundred, you can probably "fix" them by handįaster than you could work out the regular expressions to try to do it with Have no waypoints with an N surrounded by spaces) and then parsed and Something quick and dirty that grabs everything up to " N " (assuming you If it's a one time need and you have control over the data, you could write We don't have any "guess where each field starts and stops" option. ![]() ![]() > around in the way I have the example? I know this is a long shot but I am > is there a format available to where I do not have to change anything > for you, please consider supporting its development at > If you find GPSBabel useful, especially if a feature was added or fixed > gpsbabel -i csv -f xxx.csv -o humminbird -F - | gpsbabel -i humminbird -f > mathematically the same) data, subject to Hummminbird's length restrictions. > GPSBabel that successfully reads it and gives you back the same (well, > trick, here is that line converted to humminbird then piped to another > some commas around, it would look like: > If I put them in the order described in our documentation at > Hint: Where are the commas in your Comma Separated Values? > I am trying to convert CSV format into. > On Tue, at 8:18 PM, BRENT McLAMB wrote: Is there a format available to where I do not have to change anythingĪround in the way I have the example? I know this is a long shot but I am You, please consider supporting its development at If you find GPSBabel useful, especially if a feature was added or fixed for Gpsbabel -i csv -f xxx.csv -o humminbird -F - | gpsbabel -i humminbird -f. Mathematically the same) data, subject to Hummminbird's length restrictions. That successfully reads it and gives you back the same (well, Here is that line converted to humminbird then piped to another GPSBabel If I put them in the order described in our documentation at Hint: Where are the commas in your Comma Separated Values? > If this is incorrect could someone please correct this and repost the > Error running gpsbabel: Process exited unsucessfully with code 1 > csv: Invalid latitude 360.000000 in waypoint. > C:/Users/Brent/Desktop/HumminbirdGPS.hwr > C:\Users\Brent\Desktop\GPS Coordinates.txt -o humminbird -F > gpsbabel -w -i csv,snwhite=0,snupper=0,snunique=0,prefer_shortnames=0 -f I am having trouble just getting started.
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