Filemaker pro 11 tabs series#
6.8.2 Exporting Tab-delimited TextĮxporting tab-delimited text creates a series of "records" as described on the exporting overview page. If your import file looks like this (note that "\t" refers to a single tab character, e.g. Start time, end time, speaker name, transcript.Given the various optional fields, this means your tab-delimited file should match one of the following field orderings. (When InqScribe exports data records, it uses vertical tabs in this way, as does FileMaker Pro.) If your transcript contains multiple lines, use a vertical tab character (ASCII 11) to separate the lines. This field cannot contain end of line characters, since those are used to separate records. If this field is blank, InqScribe will ignore it. Optional, but if present, end timecode must be present too. InqScribe expects the tab-delimited data to have from two to four fields: This is useful if you maintain a database of such records in another application. You can use CR (Macintosh default), CR/LF (Windows), or LF (Unix) InqScribe will handle them all just fine.Ī record is a combination of a timecode and related text that is associated with that timecode. Note: Records can be separated by any common end of line character. Tab-delimited format means that each line of the file corresponds to a single record, and fields within a record are separated by tab characters (e.g. You can import a series of records in tab-delimited format. You can find general guidance for importing and exporting data elsewhere. This is a convenient format for bringing transcript data into Excel or some other spreadsheet-like application. InqScribe can import and export tab-delimited text files.