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DoManager - Getting Your Things Done

DoManager should help you to get your things done through the day. Unlike other task managment tools as Task Coach, DoManager is not intended to help you prioritize, categorize or order  your tasks. It’s assumed that the tasks you create in DoManager are things which need to be done, now or next. Quickstart Download the ZIP file and extract it. No need for installation or setup, it’s portable. The ZIP file contains a template database (TEMPLATE.FDB).  You could use this template right away or copy and rename this template to a more friendly name.  When starting DoManger it will ask you to select a database. Select your copied database template file to start. When creating time logs, the reports are saved under your user's documents folder.  A subfolder “DoManagerReports” will be created automatically if it not exists
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Postprocessing RegExTratcor output for analysis

In order to analyze your data in a chart tool like Excel, you have to to manage five steps. Define your search terms Search your files with RegExTractor Create a transformation file Transform your xml Import the transformed xml into Excel and analyze your data. RegExTractor don't want to reinvent the wheel. It's just closing a gap. It enables you to "convert" a text file (or a part of it) into xml. I've already explained the main principles of point 1 and 2 in the "Getting Started" tutorials. And this is all RegExTractor is doing for you. For the next steps we'd like to use mature tools and technologies instead of inventing new ones. In this post I'd like to show, how to go the whole way to get an Excel chart out of your data. Remember the example log from the "Getting Started" tutorials. As this is a log from one of my applications I know, that every message contains the class name and the method from which the log entr

RegExTractor: Getting Started (Part 2)

In this post I will show how RegExTractor will use regular expressions as search terms. As seen in part 1 of this tutorial RegExTractors search result show us all findings of the provided search term "Application started". But this is not our goal. We'd like to know all dates and times when our application was started. RegExTractor supports regular expressions. It's assumed that you're familiar with regular expressions . The things we are interested in is the date, the time and the text "Application started". So we build our regular expressions using brackets to define our match groups. (\d{2}.\d{2}.\d{2} ) ( \d{2}:\d{2}:\d{2} ).+?( Application Started ) We create a search term file as described in part 1 using this more complex regular expression as search term instead of just the simple search string. The result looks like this: Doing the regular expression with .NET Framework functions the search will return the whole match of our regula

RegExTractor: Getting Started (Part 1)

In this tutorial I like to show you the main functionalities of RegExTractor. RegExTractor is build for complex searches. Keep in mind not to use RegExTractor if there is an easier way to accomplish your task! You may download the latest release of RegExTractor on GitHub . For this example we have a file folder containing some application log files: These files look like this one here and we're interested in how often the application has been started. Create a search term file A search term file is a simple text file and as the name implies this file will contain all our search terms. In our simple example we will search for a single text term: "Application Started". Search with RegExTractor Now we open RegExTractor and choose the file folder which contains our example files. Decide if you like to search recursive in sub folders or if you like to search the top folder only. You may also apply a filter for files, if maybe just files with the extens