WordPipe can be run from a DOS shell or from a shortcut with parameters to make it run automatically. This is very useful for
automation and scheduling (by making the short cut an entry in the Start Up folder),
and for running WordPipe from a batch file.
Here is a complete example:
| /F=<.wpp filename> |
Opens a WordPipe settings file. |
| /REPORT=<report
filename> |
At the conclusion of the job, a text file
report is written to the given filename. The /REPORT parameter must be after
any /F command and before the /G command. |
| /G |
Go. Begin processing replacements with WordPipe. Processing of the command
line does not continue until the processing job is complete. |
| /GS |
Same as /G, but search only mode. |
| /I=<filename> |
Imports a search/replace list from Excel, Tab
or CSV-delimited file, and adds it to the end of the grid. The current
options settings are used for each row added. |
| /MAXIMIZED |
Opens the application maximized. |
| /MINIMIZED |
Opens the application minimized. |
| /Q |
Quit WordPipe at the end of processing. The
current settings are not saved. |
| /Z=<filename> |
Read command line parameters from the specified file. Very
useful for performing large numbers of changes, or for working around the Windows
limitation of approx 260 characters on the command line.
For example, if you had the long command line
start /w wordpipe.exe "/f=my special filter.wpp" /g
"/f=my special filter2.wpp" /g "/f=my special
filter3.wpp" /g "/f=my special filter4.wpp" /g /q
This would change to something like
start /w wordpipe.exe /z=commands.txt
and the file commands.txt would contain
/f=my special filter.wpp
/g
/f=my special filter2.wpp
/g
/f=my special filter3.wpp
/g
/f=my special filter4.wpp
/g
/q
|