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January 09, 2005

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Martin D.

Does this or any other similar program work in reverse? ie. is it possible to take a database file produced when extracting a "one-name" collection, and convert it into a GEDCOM file?

dgroslands

So, for those of us who are not computer experts, what is a delimited file?

Dick Eastman

---> is it possible to take a database file produced when extracting a "one-name" collection, and convert it into a GEDCOM file?

Going from a rigidly defined format such as GEDCOM to another format is easier to program, as the programmer knows exactly where all the data elements will be. However, I am not aware of anyone who has been able to write a general-purpose, "convert data in any format-to-GEDCOM" utility.

Dick Eastman

---> what is a delimited file?

"A data format in which each field and each record is separated by a character that is used as a delimiter."

In other words, the data is rigidly specified as to location. Think of an Excel spreadsheet: that is one example of a delimited file. All the data is in specific columns, each clearly labeled as to what it is. Each records fills one row in the spreadsheet. While that is a bit simplistic example, it gets the idea across.

Census records could easily be converted to delimited files, as the data is recorded in exact conformance to a rigid standard.

Most word processing documents cannot be converted to delimited files, as they are "free form" text. This message is another example of an UNdelimited file: it is stored as a file on the web server but has no specific formatting.

Good question!

gio_pea

--->Does this or any other similar program work in reverse? ie. is it possible to take a database file produced when extracting a "one-name" collection, and convert it into a GEDCOM file?

Martin,
Try "transged" from www.visuged.org
it convert a csv file to a gedcom

Peter Bradish

Is there an English version of the VisuGed.org web site?

Steve Archer

>>Going from a rigidly defined format such as GEDCOM to another format is easier to program, as the programmer knows exactly where all the data elements will be.<<

What Dick says is exactly right, it's tricky to produce something that will deal with all the myriad layouts that people might come up with for their own use, even when the data is basically in a tabular form. However, I'm currently working on a utility to convert from spreadsheet to Gedcom, going via the Windows clipboard. Only the basic Gedcom tags will be supported, e.g. BIRT, MARR etc., and it currently assumes the input data is "event-based" - one row for a birth, or a marriage etc. I'm hoping to make it a free download from my website (www.archersoftware.co.uk) within the next few weeks, and will be interested in feedback as early versions are unlikely to work perfectly :-).

Steve

Harry Clarke

I tried Ged2cv Lite on some GEDCOM files I had downloaded from the IGI for some baptisms. My initial thoughts was this looked good, but on closer inspection I found that it had not extracted all the key information, namely the mother of the child, presumably because the mother did not have a surname in the record.

Tom Alciere

Is there currently a spreadsheet-to-GEDCOM utility? One application for this would be cemetery transcriptions, but the date of burial and place of death are not available to the transcriber reading the memorial. Be best if they also put ABT and the date of death for the date of burial, so a geographic index of events can index the burial and give an approximate date.

Peter Sampson

ExcelToGedcom is the closest utility, it's basic and works on births and deaths only and requires a lot of tweaking in excel & word. The layout and instructions come in the form of 4 worksheets. The example given doesn't quite match what excel actually produces. There is one incorrect column, and the instructions don't state what type of text file to export too intially. And Word struggles if there is a large amount of data to format, for example, deleting/repacing characters after converting from excel. Having said that, it's very useful for fairly small numbers of rows. However, I have about 150,000 rows spread over several worksheets/books. I need a utility that will cope with both Fam groups for mothers maiden name & IND groups in spreadsheet form. My only frustrations with excel are the 65,000 row limit, i need something with at least twice that as a minimum. And Date formatting always tries to set at 2008 and won't cope with pre-1904 dates

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