Hi all, I have a folder with subfolders of labviews in LV 2009 version. Is there a quick way to convert all of them to a older verson? Or do I have to open and save as an older version one by one? Thanks!
I understand what you are suggestion, but I don't understand how this method will convert all the vis into an older version? If I want to have both new and old version, do I have to make a copy of all vis before I use that method?
When you want to convert, for example a bunch of .docx files to pdf, open Adobe Acrobat Professional, click Tools from the upper right, click Action Wizard, under Actions, click "Convert all to pdf at maximum quality", choose Add files or Add folder from the drop down menu located immediately under "Files to be processed:", browse and select the folder that contain .docx or other files formats, click OK, click Start.
2. A window will open prompting you to add files. Click Add Files > Add Files... OR Add Folders... If adding a folder, navigate to it, and click OK to add it to the list. You can also select a bunch of files and drag & drop them into the Add Files window.
3. Once you have all the files listed that you want to convert, click OK. A new window called Output Options will open. In this window, select your preferred settings. For me, I want all the new PDFs to have the same filename and be in the same folder as the Word docs, so I choose these settings:
I have the same problem and have tried to batch convert multiple word documents to pdfs, unsuccessfully. I have around 300+ word documents which need to be converted to pdf's and cannot imagine opening each one and saving as pdf.
I used the Action Wizard to create an action to do so, it gives an error "An unexpected error occurred. PDFMaker was unable to produce the Adobe PDF. Whenever I try to select multiple word files into pdf's by selecting those manually, it throws the same error.
Open a powershell window (windows search bar - search 'windows powershell') and paste the following (update the path to the folder containing the files before pasting as pasting usually just executes the code immediately).
Okies, so I was basically trying to create an eBook, and now I have 26 Affinity Designer files (of pages) that I would like to convert to a .PDF. Is there any easier way to do this other than to painstakingly convert all of the files separately to a .PDF and merge them in Acrobat?
Hi brian,
Thanks for the settings screenshots, I really appreciate it! When I change these settings to convert my clips, will Shotcut save the changes? If so, that means I would need to change them back to export the final edited video. Any chance a batch convert feature might be added in the future or would that be considered a duplicate feature since the Export > Each Playlist Item already exists? Thanks again for your time.
Generally speaking, the Export > Each Playlist conversion should be good enough. If there was a problem, it would be obvious during editing and you could manually convert that one clip the traditional way. The only exception I see is handling interlaced SD video, if you have any.
The ImageProcessor converts and processes multiple files. Unlikethe Batch command, the Image Processor letsyou process files without first creating an action. You can do anyof the following in the Image Processor:
If you are processing a group of camera raw files takenunder the same lighting conditions, you can adjust the setting inthe first image to your satisfaction and then apply the same settingsto the remaining images.
Use this option with PSD or JPEGsource images if the file's color profile does not match your workingprofile. You can choose a color profile in which to convert thefirst image and all images in the folder.
Before you process your images, clickSave to save the current settings in the dialog box. The next timeyou need to process files using this group of settings, click Load,and navigate to your saved Image Processor settings.
TheBatch command runs an action on a folder of files. If you have adigital camera or a scanner with a document feeder, you can alsoimport and process multiple images with a single action. Your scanneror digital camera may need an acquire plug-in modulethat supports actions.
If the third-party plug-in wasn'twritten to import multiple documents at a time, it may not workduring batch-processing or if used as part of an action. Contact theplug-in's manufacturer for further information.
Whenbatch-processing files, you can leave all the files open, closeand save the changes to the original files, or save modified versionsof the files to a new location (leaving the originals unchanged).If you are saving the processed files to a new location, you maywant to create a new folder for the processed files before startingthe batch.
To batch-process using multiple actions,create a new action that plays all the other actions, and then batch-processusing the new action. To batch-process multiple folders,create aliases within a folder to the other folders you want to process,and select the Include All Subfolders option.
Ensures that the files you selected in the Batch commandare processed, without opening the file you may have specified inthe action's Open command. If the action contains an Open commandthat opens a saved file and you don't select this option, the Batchcommand opens and processes only the file you used to record theOpen command (This occurs because the Batch command opens the filespecified by the action after each of the files in the Batch sourcefolder is opened. Because the most recently opened file is the onenamed in the action, the Batch command performs the action on thatfile, and none of the files in the Batch source folder are processed.)
Ensures that processed files are saved to the destination folder specified in the Batch command (or to their original folder if you chose Save and Close), with their original names or the names you specified in the File Naming section of the Batch dialog box.
If you don't select this option and your action includes a Save As command, your files will be saved into the folder specified by the Save As command in the action, instead of the folder specified in the Batch command. In addition, if you don't select this option and the Save As command in the action specifies a filename, the Batch command overwrites the same file (the file specified in the action) each time it processes an image.
If you want the Batch command to process files using the original filenames in the folder you specified in the Batch command, save your image in the action. Then, when you create the batch, select Override Action "Save As" Command and specify a destination folder. If you rename the images in the Batch command and don't select Override Action "Save As" Command, Photoshop saves your processed images twice: once with the new name in the specified folder, and once with the original name in the folder specified by the Save As command in the action.
Some Save options aren't available in the Batch or Create Droplet commands (such as JPEG compression or TIFF options). To use these options, record a Save As step in the action that contains the desired options, and then use the Override Action "Save As" Commands option to make sure that your files are saved where you specify in the Batch or Create Droplet command. Photoshop disregards the specified filename and path in the Action's Save As command, and retains the Save options using the new path and filename you specify in the Batch dialog.
Specifies file naming conventions if writing files to a newfolder. Select elements from the pop-up menus or enter text intothe fields to be combined into the default names for all files.The fields let you change the order and formatting of the componentsof the filename. You must include at least one field that is uniquefor every file (for example, filename, serial number, or serial letter)to prevent files from overwriting each other. Starting Serial Number specifiesthe starting number for any serial number fields. Serial letterfields always start with the letter "A" for the first file.
Saving files using the Batch command options usually saves the files in the same format as the original files. To create a batch process that saves files in a new format, record the Save As command followed by the Close command as part of your original action. Then choose Override Action "Save As" Commands for the Destination when setting up the batch process.
I would like to ask you, please, if would it be possible a similar code for simultaneously to convert many fastq files to respective bam files?. Could you write that code ?. I was trying the above code changing fastq by bam and vice versa, but it doesn't work for me.
I have 50 text files which need to be converted from utf-8 bom to ANSI. In Notepad++ We can do it with single file, but I want all opened files to be converted to ANSI in one short way. Is there any option there?
Was able to get what i wanted. Convert strokes and text to outlines and save all the files to PDF X-3. Used some code parts from other questions and answers surrounding similar problems. Here it is what worked for me:
I'm using Jupyter Notebooks in ArcGIS Pro and I would like to convert multiple .laz files into .las files by using the opensource toolbox 'lastools' and its function 'laszip'. For this I would like to iterate through all files within my working directory by using a for-loop.
Testing on Windows 10 with LirbeOffice 5.2.6.2 shows that the second option above works fine with explicit filenames but not with wildcards so you may need to get a list of your doc files, dir /b *.doc > temp.txt, and then edit it into a batch file.
760c119bf3