finding things in unix
Dennis Malen
dmalen at malen.com
Mon Apr 26 16:10:07 PDT 2010
Henry,
Others on this list would be able to answer that questions much better than
I would. My initial reaction would be to determine how large the file and
how many fields, then determine what type of files your program can import.
If it is some type of text file then filePro can easily create something
that is compatible. I am sure others on this list will be able to give you a
better answer.
Dennis Malen
516.479.5912
----- Original Message -----
From: "Henry B. Castaneda" <henryca at comcast.net>
To: "'Dennis Malen'" <dmalen at malen.com>; "'Kenneth Brody'"
<kenbrody at spamcop.net>
Cc: "'FilePro Mailing List'" <filepro-list at lists.celestial.com>
Sent: Monday, April 26, 2010 6:16 PM
Subject: RE: finding things in unix
> Hi Dennis,
>
> This is totally unrelated, but I have to admit that I am not familiar with
> the correct way.
>
> I have a business that runs its orders using filePro on Unix. I am now
> using
> salesforce.com for CRM. How can I export data from filePro to this
> software
> that is web based?
>
> Thanks,
>
> Henry
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: filepro-list-bounces+henryca=comcast.net at lists.celestial.com
> [mailto:filepro-list-bounces+henryca=comcast.net at lists.celestial.com] On
> Behalf Of Dennis Malen
> Sent: Monday, April 26, 2010 6:00 PM
> To: Kenneth Brody
> Cc: FilePro Mailing List
> Subject: Re: finding things in unix
>
> Yes and it works perfectly.
>
> Dennis Malen
> 516.479.5912
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Kenneth Brody" <kenbrody at spamcop.net>
> To: "Dennis Malen" <dmalen at malen.com>
> Cc: "FilePro Mailing List" <filepro-list at lists.celestial.com>
> Sent: Monday, April 26, 2010 5:03 PM
> Subject: Re: finding things in unix
>
>
>> On 4/26/2010 4:27 PM, Dennis Malen wrote:
>> [...]
>>> From: "Jean-Pierre A. Radley" <appl at jpr.com>
>> [...]
>>>> | Yes, your summary and conclusions drawn are correct. Find is the most
>>>> useful
>>>> | as it looks in all directories without providing the proper PATH.
>>>>
>>>> Another of your mis-statements...
>>>>
>>>> Find does not look "in all directories". It looks under specified
>>>> directories.
>>>>
>>> Correction: I cd / and then find. Looks in all directories. I have
>>> always
>>> been able to find a file this way.
>>
>> Exactly what JP said. You specified the root directory on the "find"
>> command line.
>>
>> --
>> Kenneth Brody
>
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