![]() ![]() Currently, I have a JSON array of listing data that could be fed into a program, and am trying to find my way on the GUI interface. The photos can not go into a spreadsheet, so they have to be maintained separately. The data should be presented in spreadsheet format, but adding the description to the spreadsheet might make the file too fat. At this point, the archive tool is gathering up the description, photos, and basic data, including item specifics, but I haven't yet determined how that data should be processed for the user. In addition to a tool-in-progress dedicated to just Item Specifics (for sellers who need to capture item specfics before the mid June category juggling), I'm also currently working on a tool to archive all the listing basics, but it really depends on what "and such" is needed. The tool was originally developed to help sellers cope with all of the active content mandates and make bulk revisions to their descriptions, but will ultimately remain as a tool to bulk edit (with a versatile Regex find/replace) and bulk archive descriptions: This next tool can download all of the item descriptions when one of the "archive" options is selected on the scan setup screen. ![]() The full AutoScan on this tool will extract all the eBay photo URLs:Ī report option on that tool will send that list of URLs to the zip tool, which will do the hard work of fetching the actual photos and zipping them into downloadable files: ![]() I suspect that is the combination method that was mentioning. I currently have two tools that will extract and save descriptions and photos. Please repost, if you wish more File Exchange and Selling Manager Pro can download most of the listing basics, but not the descriptions and photos. This process requires considerable explanation. Then once you have combined the info, you can make your changes, then upload those changes to eBay's FileExchange processor to 'Revise' your listings. Then combining those extracts in to one spreadsheet file. It involves extracting info from different sources. If you have experience using Excel or similar spreadsheets, there is one more option. If you have programming talents, you could use the eBay APIs to do as you request. These packages are subscription based and can be pricey if you have many listings. Other listing programs allow exporting of listings. TurboLister allowed members to export listings, but Turbo is being depreciated, and discouraged for new members who are not already an active user of that package. so i should be able to figure api's and such out with a little bit of coaching and finger pointing me in the right direction or at least a broad overview of data sources and events.milestones are limited options for doing as you request. used to code some too for the navy 20 years ago, multi-user environs up to about 500 users simultaneously. there were few programs i couldn't figure out. Hi, i am very fluent in databases and spreadsheets up to a maybe 10 years ago. ![]()
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