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RE: Export Superelevation

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Dear Assaf,

There is no formal export tool, however, as a workaround, you can get the information from the editor pictured in a previous post.  

1.  The editor is customizable, so hide any columns that you do not want to see.  You can do this by holding your cursor over any heading, right-click and select Show Columns. (For example, there is a Name column that contains both station and name that I turn off).   If you want to reimport, display Superelevation, Station, Cross Slope, Pivot Edge.  

2.  Highlight all data in the table that you want in the report, then <crtl> + C to copy (windows copy command).

3.  In a blank Excel spreadsheet, highlight cell A1, then <ctrl> + V to paste.  (windows paste command).

4.  In order to use as the CSV file to reimport, change the cross slopes from % to decimals using standard Excel commands (for example -2% would be -.02.)

5.  The pivot edge must be either RS or LS, so use Excel commands for search and replace to change these.  Alternately, you can leave this column out of the import and just enter it into Excel.  

6.  Save as csv.  Be sure to check your Windows delimiter setting as that is what is used by the super import tool.  In the U.S. Windows generally defaults to a comma, but this is not the case for international users.  Do NOT change your delimiter setting, just be sure your file matches your machine setting.

7.  You can make edits in the Excel spreadsheet (then save as csv again) or in the CSV file.

I have attached documentation for the import superelevation command in another post on this thread.

Regards,

Lou


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