How to store results in a Excel file?

You seems to have very cunningly avoided comments on

If you are a native English speaker, then you act like a disgrace to
your kind. This kind of English you never learned at school.

It is dangerous to sit in a glass house and throw stones, I know. It
can be
fun to do this ou812 "Oh, you ate one too" or "R U ready 2 rock"
kind
of
English, but it does not belong in this group.
Dear Svenn, What i was saying is the kind of language that you have
used above is improper and very impolite and not acceptable in any
case. You could have said the same thing in a much polite way. Instead
of accepting that your comments were actually not polite to start with,
you got emotionally frantic and started yelling in my direction.

--
Kamesh ( "What's in a name? That which we call a rose
By any other word would smell as sweet."

--From Romeo and Juliet (II, ii, 1-2) )
 
You guys are all crazy. Who cares if he uses 'ur' and 'u' in his
posts? The more important point is that he was trying to help out
Swetha and if he was able to do that he should be commended rather than
put down. I have just read all these posts and I cannot believe that
you have turned a technical forum into an English class. I pray that
when I submit a question that if somebody does answer it that I do not
put that person down because he used 'u' instead of 'you' or 'ur'
instead of 'your'. This whole discussion is very impolite and
unprofessional toward vkam who was just trying to help. Now next time
one of the two of you have a problem, I doubt very much that vkam will
help you. And you might ask, why are you jumping in. Well, it seems
kind of unfair to have two people up against one over something that is
not Cadence related.
 
How many times should i tell you that there is no problem in your
correction, but the WAY you corrected is the problem. You never seem
to understand this simple thing. All you are doing over here is just
beating around the bush without acknowledging your mistakes. All I need
is your "EXPLANATION" on "your following statements" and thats it.

If you are a native English speaker, then you act like a disgrace to
your kind. This kind of English you never learned at school.

It is dangerous to sit in a glass house and throw stones, I know. It
can be
fun to do this ou812 "Oh, you ate one too" or "R U ready 2 rock"
kind
of
English, but it does not belong in this group.
--
Kamesh.
 
Svenn Are Bjerkem wrote:

No it isn't. If you are a native English speaker and use that
childish SMS
type of writing in a forum with professionals, then you sooner or
later get
a correction. In this case you got one from me. Normal people would
take
that signal and start behaving. You obviously cannot take a
correction on
something, correct it and get on with being professional.

How many times should i tell you that there is no problem in your
correction, but the WAY you corrected is the problem. You never seem
to understand this simple thing. All you are doing over here is just
beating around the bush without acknowledging your mistakes. All I need
is your "EXPLANATION" on "your following statements" and thats it.

If you are a native English speaker, then you act like a disgrace to
your kind. This kind of English you never learned at school.
It is dangerous to sit in a glass house and throw stones, I know. It
can be
fun to do this ou812 "Oh, you ate one too" or "R U ready 2 rock"
kind
of
English, but it does not belong in this group.
--
Kamesh.
 
vkamesh@gmail.com wrote:

If you are a native English speaker, then you act like a disgrace to
your kind. This kind of English you never learned at school.
If you are a native English speaker, then you behave below your competence
level as you have learned in school how to write proper English. Is that so
hard to understand? You cut away the part about the non-native English
speaker whom I left the possibility that he or she had picked up this
syntax from whatever source and did not know better.

It is dangerous to sit in a glass house and throw stones, I know. It
can be
fun to do this ou812 "Oh, you ate one too" or "R U ready 2 rock"
kind
of
English, but it does not belong in this group.
I think it is clear to anybody what this means? I tell you that it can be
fun to 'jive' up your language, but that syntax is not proper in
comp.cad.cadence as it make it more difficult to read whatever you want to
say. Communication is depending on each side of the channel being able to
understand what is written, and to understand you one have not only to know
how to write English, but also how each separate letter is pronounced when
spelling. As you still keep your native language a secret, I will have to
use my own native as a base to explain to you that the way people
communicate with SMS is seriously destroying any language just to be able
to type messages fast and save space. That is actually not the real problem
as long as it stays on SMS. Any amateur radio enthusiast can tell a story
about saving time and space, but the jargon is kept within the society.

Problems start when somebody, like you, Kamesh, insist on using a "society
syntax" in places where they don't belong, like usenet, where computers
with full-featured keyboards are available. In most cases it also turns out
that people using SMS syntax are not willing to accept the fact that they
are being made aware of their misunderstanding.

--
Svenn
 
Bridging conversations, a great way to write EXCEL files on Linux/UNIX
is to output not as pure ASCII text (*.txt) but as comma separated
values (*.csv).

An advantage of CSV is MS Excel accepts csv files without question.
(With a *.txt file, questions are asked & variously answered by users.)

Here's an example of a csv file of 9 records of 3 fields each.
This should read nicely in Excel without any questions asked.

London,British English,Standard English
San Jose"," CA,Merr'-i-can Slanguage,US English
"Barbados, Barbados",Creole,Caribbean English
New Delhi,South Asian English,Indian English
Manitoba,Commonwealth English,Canadian English
Grafton,Americanisation English,Australian English
Hokitika,Newzild,New Zealand English
Yuxian,Chinglish,Chinese English
comp.cad.cadence,Contact English,Pidgin English


Note: If the field contains commas, use double quotes as shown above.
 

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