Quote from Dennis Wilkinson on 09/08/09 at 11:22:13:LeAnn, maybe I can help make a little clearer. In the Excel .CSV file of your exported data, your individual data fields are in seperate columns. For example, vendor code might be in .CSV column "A", vendor name might be in .CSV column "B", etc. Skip one row at end of last record into column "A" and enter "1", into column "B" and enter "2" and so on to last column name you are importing. These numbers are the numbers in your import table that wants to know where to get the data for that field. Where it is asking for vendor code and that is in column "A" and you have put a "1" there, you put "1" in the import table. Where asking for vendor name, you put "2" and so on...use the number that represents the field in the import table.
Hope this makes a little clearer as it took me a while to get the hang of it as well.
Dennis
Thanks for the advice. Your explanation was beneficial - who would have ever guessed to add a row to the .CSV file & enter numbers to each column, then enter those numbers to the corresponding field. One would think that an export from EVO would in-turn import its own column headings to like fields ...... But only if it were just that simple. This has to be the most un-user friendly thing I can think of at the moment. I would have been soooo much better off if I had just taken the not-so-lazy way out & simply re-entered all the information. I will certainly do that with the vendors, part numbers, & such.
I only wanted to import certain fields so I put zeros in the fields I did not want, but of course it brought in its own info that it wanted to put there. This export/import thing is for the birds.............