IBM 51 Manuel D’Utilisation

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For
 
more
 
information,
 
refer
 
to
 
the
 
DB2
 
product
 
documentation
 
available
 
at
 
For
 
languages
 
other
 
than
 
English,
 
the
 
text
 
in
 
CSV
 
reports
 
imported
 
in
 
Microsoft
 
Excel
 
is
 
garbled
 
Tivoli
 
Intelligent
 
Orchestrator
 
reports
 
that
 
are
 
exported
 
to
 
Comma
 
Separated
 
Values
 
(CSV)
 
file
 
format
 
can
 
be
 
afterwards
 
imported
 
in
 
spreadsheet
 
applications
 
such
 
as
 
Microsoft
 
Excel.
 
When
 
trying
 
to
 
import
 
CSV
 
reports
 
into
 
Excel
 
in
 
languages
 
other
 
than
 
English,
 
the
 
text
 
gets
 
garbled.
 
Cause
 
The
 
CSV
 
files
 
are
 
written
 
in
 
UTF-8
 
format
 
(abbreviation
 
for
 
Universal
 
Transformation
 
Format).
 
UTF-8
 
converts
 
16-bit
 
Unicode
 
characters
 
into
 
8-bit
 
ASCII
 
characters.
 
Microsoft
 
Excel
 
does
 
not
 
currently
 
support
 
UTF-8
 
in
 
CSV
 
format.
 
For
 
more
 
information
 
about
 
this
 
known
 
defect,
 
you
 
might
 
also
 
want
 
to
 
refer
 
to
 
http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;ja;821863.
 
Solution
 
CSV
 
files
 
are
 
written
 
in
 
UTF-8
 
format
 
to
 
support
 
multiple
 
language
 
scripts
 
in
 
a
 
single
 
report.
 
CSV
 
can
 
be
 
imported
 
into
 
spreadsheet
 
applications,
 
but
 
can
 
also
 
be
 
imported
 
into
 
the
 
database
 
using
 
custom
 
applications.
 
The
 
following
 
solutions
 
that
 
have
 
been
 
tested
 
for
 
various
 
languages
 
are
 
provided.
 
In
 
addition
 
to
 
these
 
solutions,
 
there
 
are
 
operating
 
system
 
and
 
Excel
 
requirements
 
that
 
must
 
be
 
met,
 
in
 
order
 
for
 
the
 
characters
 
to
 
be
 
displayed
 
properly.
 
Solution
 
1
 
1.
   
Open
 
the
 
<Report_name>.csv
 
file
 
in
 
Notepad,
 
and
 
then
 
save
 
it
 
as
 
Unicode,
 
renaming
 
it
 
to
 
<Report_name>_unicode.csv
.
 
2.
   
Open
 
the
 
<Report_name>_unicode.csv
 
file
 
in
 
Excel.
 
The
 
Text
 
Import
 
Wizard
 
is
 
displayed:
 
a.
   
In
 
the
 
first
 
step,
 
select
 
Delimited
 
and
 
ensure
 
that
 
all
 
other
 
options
 
are
 
clear.
 
b.
   
In
 
the
 
second
 
step,
 
clear
 
Tab
 
and
 
select
 
Comma
.
 
c.
   
Click
 
Finish
 
before
 
going
 
to
 
step
 
3.
After
 
performing
 
the
 
steps
 
described
 
above,
 
the
 
CSV
 
report
 
can
 
be
 
opened
 
in
 
Excel
 
with
 
all
 
characters
 
displayed
 
properly.
Solution
 
2
 
1.
   
Open
 
the
 
<Report_name>.csv
 
file
 
in
 
Notepad,
 
and
 
then
 
save
 
it
 
as
 
ANSI,
 
renaming
 
it
 
to
 
<Report_name>_ansi.csv
.
 
2.
   
Open
 
the
 
<Report_name>_ansi.csv
 
file
 
in
 
Excel.
 
The
 
characters
 
are
 
properly
 
displayed.
Solution
 
3
 
You
 
can
 
convert
 
the
 
CSV
 
file
 
from
 
UTF-8
 
to
 
native
 
encoding
 
using
 
a
 
code
 
conversion
 
tool.
 
You
 
can
 
use
 
the
 
native2ascii
 
command
 
line
 
utility
 
that
 
is
 
provided
 
with
 
the
 
Java
 
JDK
 
toolkit.
 
The
 
tool
 
can
 
be
 
found
 
in
 
the
 
%WAS_HOME%/AppServer/java/bin
 
directory.
 
1.
   
Open
 
a
 
command
 
prompt
 
window,
 
and
 
change
 
directories
 
until
 
you
 
reach
 
the
 
location
 
of
 
the
 
native2ascii
 
tool.
 
Alternatively,
 
you
 
can
 
set
 
the
 
value
 
of
 
Path
,
 
the
 
system
 
variable
 
for
 
the
 
operating
 
system,
 
to
 
include
 
the
 
location
 
of
 
the
 
Java
 
JDK
 
toolkit.
 
2.
   
Type
 
the
 
following
 
command:
 
 
Chapter
 
7.
 
Common
 
problems
 
and
 
known
 
limitations
 
in
 
Tivoli
 
Intelligent
 
Orchestrator
 
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