Development is going on as planned.
We are working on making the admin version of Manager and EntryClient fit for public release. Including defining a standard control set of tests to be performed before release. We are also engaged in the rewriting of Analysis and have come a long way, which is expected to be laid out for public testing within the reasonable near future.
Regarding your question on maximum number of observations, there is not really such restriction. The testfiles we use have up to 125000 observations (records). What you could do is to export to two different files based on the record number, say 1 - 50000 and then 50001-93425
If both of these read correctly then you can maybe find the error, which most likely is some date, which is not correct and the reading terminates. E.g. if there is a date in the year 206 or 2400. This type of date can occur with EpiData Classic.
best wishes
Jens Lauritsen Initiator and Coordinator EpiData Association
On 10/28/2016 09:09 AM, EpiData development and support wrote:
Dear Jens and Epidata Team, There ia prolonged silence on the list. I hope everything is fine and development is progressing.I have a unique concern. There is a flat file of classical Epidata Entry 3.1. The number of records is 93425. I am using Epidata Analysis 2.2.2 (ver 183). Epidata Analysis does not read this file.Only message I get is “Loading data D:\EpiData\PH\D.REC, please wait...The indicator below is green. When I convert this “rec file” to “dbase file” using classical Epidata Entry 3.1, the converted dbase file is easily read by Epidata Analysis. (However it adds decimal and two zer oes to the numeric data.My question is; Is there any record limit in Epidata Analysis 2.2.2 (ver 183)?With regards,Dr Shavinder _______________________________________________ EpiData-list mailing list EpiData-list@lists.umanitoba.ca http://lists.umanitoba.ca/mailman/listinfo/epidata-list