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I have multiple (16) .tpk imagery files that I want to use for basemap sideloading to collector. I want all of these .tpks to be able to be sideloaded to the same collector map. The two theoretical solutions I can think of are merging the files into one .tpk for sideloading, or some work around to allow collector a single collector web map to accept a bunch of files for upload. I am trying to develop this for a non-GIS team of users, so I want a simple to use single collector map with all the basemap data they might need without them having to change things or re-upload depending on where they are going. So far I have not been able to use the Create Tile Package GP tool from all the .tpk files in a map in ArcGIS Pro.
I have not found anything so far on specifically merging .tpk files, though I think that is the more likely solution. I was thinking I could export the .tpk to raster, mosaic all the files to new raster, and then export again to .tpk, but I'm even having trouble exporting the files to rasters. Any suggestions for any part of this process would be much appreciated!
I have merged master into my bugXY branch, and needed to merge a file. But git mergetool failed (my noob fault, I guess), and even though I aborted the merge it left me with a dirty working directory but not in need-to-merge state. I would like to repeat the merge command, but I can't due to some new files left by the merge.
Now nothing is staged any more, but I still have a bunch of untracked working tree files which hinder me to git merge again ("would be overwritten, please [re]move them"). How can I do that? I guess rm path/to/file.php for each of them would work, but there are a lot of them...
If you didn't commit the files before you ran the reset command, then they get wiped out by the reset command. One of the options you have would be to use git reset --hard which will reset you back to the state of the provided commit.
I am doing a merge between two branches and TFS/Visual Studio 2013 is identifying 1800 files required to be merged. However, doing a diff between the two branches shows that there are only 100 that are actually different.
Is there a way to filter the pending changes list to only show files which are really changed so I can do inspect the differences visually? It is very error prone to have to scroll through and manually do this, skipping items that show only [merge].
My current alternative would be to do a diff on the branches, and specifically look in the pending changes window at files which are identified as different, but that is rather cumbersome for something that should be simple.
Edit: Here is a screenshot of the pending changes window. I only care about the items which are [merge,edit] as it means there is a change and I want to see the diff. Conflicts will be shown in the Resolve Conflicts window. I don't care about [merge] items, as they are identical. There are 1000s of files with no changes, but I want to single out the ones that have changed and inspect the diff.
You can do the merge and before checking in the files, just compare your branch folder with the latest version. So if you are merging from anywhere into branch-Servicing for example, Compare $/branch-Servicing with your local workspace for that branch:
If you want to view all changes in a merge, excluding merge-only with no changes, the easiest way is to run tf diff from the VS command line. This will use the diff tool on all changed files. I believe this shows adds as well as edits. I do wish you could sort the pending changes window by type of change action like in previous versions.
Install TFS Power Tools and execute tfpt uu /noget /r * in the root of the branch. As a result, TFS will go through and undo checkouts for any unchanged files whilst leaving your modified files untouched.
Another option is to "Undo Checkout" all the changes, and clicking "No to All" when asked to confirm for undo checkout. This way Visual Studio will "undo checkout" all the files that are not changed, and all the changed files will remain checked out. Drawback: this method undoes renames.
If you do the merge TFS will figure out at run time that the files do not need modification and you will not see them as changed in the annotate tool. However if you pick-and-choose the files to merge you will leave a bunch of "pending merges" hanging around that you will have to deal with later anyway...
I want to analyze all of the tissue a data together and all of the tissue b data together. I processed them each separately to the point of creating a dada2 table for each, then filtered the table from plate 2 to create a table with just tissue a (for example), and then used merge (sum) to merge plate 2 tissue a data with the plate 1 tissue a data.
Restart your analyses using sample IDs that share the same name across sequencing runs. Process each run independently with DADA2, and then use qiime feature-table merge to merge samples sharing the same name. You can use a single metadata file containing your sample IDs, along with the merged feature table, for downstream analyses.
You could for example use a TChain:
If your files are small, you could also use the hadd tool to merge the root files before processing.
Or process files one by one and then use hadd to merge the resulting histograms.
First, check the file->d_name, is it correct? And why so many string and pointer copies? You could simply use std::string or TString. Then, make sure that all your .root files are valid, and make sure that you only add .root files in dataChain.Add()
(and please, next time, open a new topic instead of replying to a 4 years old one)
Yes the top copper layer was split into 2 separate gerber files. Board houses have no clue what to do with that and are requiring me to send them one gerber file for that top component layer. I did not think that was panelizing since it is the same single board. I know I can load both gerbers into Kicad but it shows them as 2 separate layers and no way that I can merge them (that I know of).
When both files are loaded into Kicad they are shown correctly and are aligned but as I have said, Kicad considers it to be 2 separate layers rather than 1 layer and I need it to be one file for that layer instead of the current 2 files.
I guess it may be doable, by messing around with the individual .xml files. But I'd expect, if..... you succeed in doing that, you may get a real merge, that is: equations on top of each other because they are on the same position of the sheet...
Hi
You can easily do this by Netcdf Extractor. It's a windows tool that in this tool, the user can extract data from many netcdf files without any knowledge about programming.
-Extractor.aspx
I do the same ( cdo -f nc mergetime era5_*.nc era5_hrs.nc) but it seems to be that my timesteps reach the limit of CDO when I merge files in one. The text appears as:
" cdo mergetime (Warning): Some data values (min=-10233 max=33136) are outside the valid range (-32768 - 32767) of the used output precision! Use the CDO option -b 32 or -b 64 to increase the output precision. "
So, I want to ask, How to do as the machine suggests? Is it cdo -b 64 -f nc mergetime era5_*.nc era5_hrs.nc? or cdo -f nc -b 64 mergetime era5_*.nc era5_hrs.nc?
Thanks so much!
I have several .lyr files (from an external organisation) which have different features specific to the shapefile the layer file was made for. I have combined the shapefiles and would now like to combine the layer files so that I have all the styles for all the features in the combined shapefile. I am struggling to find a away to do this, so I was wondering if anyone knows if this is possible?
By default, Compose reads two files, a compose.yml and an optionalcompose.override.yml file. By convention, the compose.ymlcontains your base configuration. The override file cancontain configuration overrides for existing services or entirely newservices.
To use multiple override files, or an override file with a different name, youcan use the -f option to specify the list of files. Compose merges files inthe order they're specified on the command line. See thedocker compose command reference for more informationabout using -f.
When you use multiple Compose files, you must make sure all paths in thefiles are relative to the base Compose file (the first Compose file specifiedwith -f). This is required because override files need not be validCompose files. Override files can contain small fragments of configuration.Tracking which fragment of a service is relative to which path is difficult andconfusing, so to keep paths easier to understand, all paths must be definedrelative to the base file.
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