Jump to content

Excel VBS and AutoIt


xcaliber13
 Share

Recommended Posts

In VBS  you can import a text file into Excel with a xlFixedWidth    Example:

 objExcel.Workbooks.OpenText"C:\temp\temp2.txt",,,xlFixedWidth,,,,,,,,, _
    Array(Array(0, xlTextFormat),Array(8, xlTextFormat),Array(20, xlTextFormat),Array(31, xlTextFormat))

This lets me define the start and end of each column and the format of that column. Can I define the start and end of each column using

_Excel_BookOpenText($oExcel, $sTextFile, Default, $xlFixedWidth) ?

Thank you
 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

According to MSDN you need to specify the starting position and the type in an array as described for xlDelimited in Example 1 of _Excel_BookOpenText.
Details can be found here: https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ff837097(v=office.14).aspx Section: Remarks - FieldInfo paramter Information

My UDFs and Tutorials:

Spoiler

UDFs:
Active Directory (NEW 2022-02-19 - Version 1.6.1.0) - Download - General Help & Support - Example Scripts - Wiki
ExcelChart (2017-07-21 - Version 0.4.0.1) - Download - General Help & Support - Example Scripts
OutlookEX (2021-11-16 - Version 1.7.0.0) - Download - General Help & Support - Example Scripts - Wiki
OutlookEX_GUI (2021-04-13 - Version 1.4.0.0) - Download
Outlook Tools (2019-07-22 - Version 0.6.0.0) - Download - General Help & Support - Wiki
PowerPoint (2021-08-31 - Version 1.5.0.0) - Download - General Help & Support - Example Scripts - Wiki
Task Scheduler (NEW 2022-07-28 - Version 1.6.0.1) - Download - General Help & Support - Wiki

Standard UDFs:
Excel - Example Scripts - Wiki
Word - Wiki

Tutorials:
ADO - Wiki
WebDriver - Wiki

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...

Water,

            Just getting back to this one.  Sorry for the delay.   So in Example 1  of _Excel_BookOpenText

Local $aField1[2] = [1, $xlTextFormat]
Local $aField2[2] = [2, $xlTextFormat]
Local $aField3[2] = [3, $xlGeneralFormat]
Local $aField4[2] = [4, $xlDMYFormat]
Local $aField5[2] = [5, $xlTextFormat]
Local $aFieldInfo[5] = [$aField1, $aField2, $aField3, $aField4, $aField5]

$aField1[2]  <---    Is this the number [2] that is the starting position of the column?  If not  then where do I put the starting position of each column?

Like the first column starts at position 0,  the second column starts at position 20,  the third column starts at position 30  

 

Thank you

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yes. According to the help file:

$aFieldInfo [optional] An array containing parse information for individual columns of data.
    The interpretation depends on the value of DataType.
    When the data is delimited, this argument is an array of two-element arrays, with each two-element array
    specifying the conversion options for a particular column.
    The first element is the column number (1-based), and the second element is one of the XlColumnDataType
    constants specifying how the column is parsed (default = keyword Default)

My UDFs and Tutorials:

Spoiler

UDFs:
Active Directory (NEW 2022-02-19 - Version 1.6.1.0) - Download - General Help & Support - Example Scripts - Wiki
ExcelChart (2017-07-21 - Version 0.4.0.1) - Download - General Help & Support - Example Scripts
OutlookEX (2021-11-16 - Version 1.7.0.0) - Download - General Help & Support - Example Scripts - Wiki
OutlookEX_GUI (2021-04-13 - Version 1.4.0.0) - Download
Outlook Tools (2019-07-22 - Version 0.6.0.0) - Download - General Help & Support - Wiki
PowerPoint (2021-08-31 - Version 1.5.0.0) - Download - General Help & Support - Example Scripts - Wiki
Task Scheduler (NEW 2022-07-28 - Version 1.6.0.1) - Download - General Help & Support - Wiki

Standard UDFs:
Excel - Example Scripts - Wiki
Word - Wiki

Tutorials:
ADO - Wiki
WebDriver - Wiki

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
 Share

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...