Over the last several weeks, I've been working extensively with comma-separated
value (CSV) files. One simple example is the component I described in "Gathering
File System Data" (October 2006, Instant-Doc 93451), FileDB.wsc, which saves
information about files to a CSV file. CSV files are plain-text database files
in which each line represents a record (row) that's divided into fields (columns),
with commas separating data items from each other, as Figure
1 shows. The first line (sometimes called a header line) of the CSV file
contains the field or column names, and subsequent lines contain the data. Double-quote
characters define individual items in case a data item contains a comma. CSV
files can contain an arbitrary number of lines, and they might not contain a
header line that contains the field names. As I worked with the output from
FileDB.wsc, I realized that an HTML application (HTA) would be an ideal way
to quickly and easily view CSV files. Let's take a look at the HTA I wrote and
see how the scripting behind it makes it work. . . .
nice
KWhite December 19, 2006 (Article Rating: )
There is no code in the zip file other than a couple excerpts.
testme December 28, 2006 (Article Rating: )
The HTA script is missing from the zip file. The zip only includes the two functions.
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KWhite December 19, 2006 (Article Rating: