I’m a membership organiser with a community union and spend an inordinate amount of my time prepping excel spreadsheets with membership data. Is there anything out there I could use to split the entire data set into sheets with tables of, say, 20 members each, their contact details, plus boxes for whether or not they can attend this or that event?
It’s definitely possible. How complex the solution will be depends on how the input data set is organized. Could you post an example (replacing the actual data with some placeholders)?
It depends on what parameters I choose to export from nationbuilder. Usually I just export the names and primary mobile phone number after filtering by city address. These come organised into two simple columns. I then add extra columns for criteria to phone bank for, such as attendance at an upcoming event
How is the exported data formatted? Is it a CSV spreadsheet, a plaintext file, or something else?
CSV
So the contents of the file opened in a text editor will be something like this, for each row:
Name,PhoneNumber
And the output you want is
Name,PhoneNumber,ExtraCriteria1,...,ExtraCriteriaN
Do you intend to manually fill in the extra criteria columns (i.e. the columns should be blank in the output)? If so, I could just write a simple shell/Python script or something (I don’t use Windows, so if you’d like me to write an Excel script, I wouldn’t be able to test it)
@Shaggy0291@lemmygrad.ml I made a script that should work for this (with placeholder columns for now, but I can fix that if you tell me what columns you want, or I could just tell you what to change). You need a Unix shell interpreter, either locally (e.g. the Bash interpreter included with Git on Windows) or through some online service (although I wouldn’t recommend that since you’d presumably be uploading sensitive data as input).
shell script
#!/bin/sh add_header() { name=sheet$sheet.csv [ -f $name ] && echo "File '$name' already exists." && exit 1 printf 'NAME,PHONE NUMBER,SOME COLUMN,SOME OTHER COLUMN\n' > $name } print_sheet() { echo "### SHEET $sheet ###" cat sheet$sheet.csv echo } count=1 sheet=1 add_header IFS=''; while read line; do printf '%s,,\n' $line >> sheet$sheet.csv if [ $count = 20 ]; then count=0 print_sheet sheet=$(expr $sheet + 1) add_header else count=$(expr $count + 1) fi done print_sheet
If you copy this to a file
process.sh
and you have input in some fileinput.csv
, you can runcat input.csv | sh ./process.sh
and it’ll create filessheet1.csv
,sheet2.csv
, etc., for each group of 20 rowsYou’re a legend and a true comrade! What is a unix shell interpreter?
It’s just software that reads a script (like what I posted) and executes the corresponding instructions. The most popular (AFAIK) interpreter is Bash.
If you’re using Windows 10-11 (unless it’s a 32-bit version), you can either use the built-in Bash through the “Windows Subsystem for Linux” (instructions on how to enable it here; I’ve never tried it, though, and it installs a lot more than just Bash), or install something like Git, which includes a version of Bash. I’d recommend the latter (you can just download the “thumbdrive edition” to avoid installing anything).
If you’re using MacOS (or whatever it’s called now), it’s a lot easier since it’s partially based on Unix (just use the built-in terminal emulator).
Let me know when you’ve got Bash working (or if something went wrong)