Justin, You can export datasets to text files. If you open a dataset in HDFView, go to Table -> Export Data To File.
Beyond that, you'd need a custom program. Personally, I'd write something up in Python to convert datasets to CSV. -John On Fri, Oct 3, 2014 at 9:44 AM, Justin Gragg <[email protected]> wrote: > I am using the HDF Viewer to look at .hdf5-formatted output files from a > river model. Basically there are a number of locations (identified by a > unique number) that each have two output tables associated with them. Is > there any easy way to batch import this information to Excel (vs. what I’m > doing now is just opening each table and copying/pasting)? Thanks. > > > > *Justin D. Gragg* > > Managing Associate Geomorphologist/Hydrologist > > ESA | Environmental Hydrology > > 1425 N. McDowell Boulevard, Suite 200 > > Petaluma, CA 94954 > > 707.795-0900 main | 707.795-0902 fax > > 707.795-0913 direct > > > > _______________________________________________ > Hdf-forum is for HDF software users discussion. > [email protected] > > http://mail.lists.hdfgroup.org/mailman/listinfo/hdf-forum_lists.hdfgroup.org > Twitter: https://twitter.com/hdf5 >
_______________________________________________ Hdf-forum is for HDF software users discussion. [email protected] http://mail.lists.hdfgroup.org/mailman/listinfo/hdf-forum_lists.hdfgroup.org Twitter: https://twitter.com/hdf5
