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Train Timetables in MS Excel format
I've been asked to produce a series of Excel spreadsheets with train
timetable information for a number of National Rail (London only) routes. Besides using the Network Rail journey planner and manually typing/pasting them in, is there any way of getting this information into Excel? It's getting a bit complicated and time consuming! Thanks, David. |
Train Timetables in MS Excel format
David FitzGerald wrote:
I've been asked to produce a series of Excel spreadsheets with train timetable information for a number of National Rail (London only) routes. Besides using the Network Rail journey planner and manually typing/pasting them in, is there any way of getting this information into Excel? It's getting a bit complicated and time consuming! Thanks, David. This is also something I've wondered. I don't suppose it's published in XML, CSV (anything!) anywhere? It'd be quite nice to have this sort of thing available for unconnected PDAs, smartphones etc. I wonder who "owns" the information, the TOCs, National Rail etc? |
Train Timetables in MS Excel format
"Dan Gravell" wrote in message ... I wonder who "owns" the information, the TOCs, National Rail etc? Try ATOC. |
Train Timetables in MS Excel format
On 14 Apr 2004 06:20:32 -0700, David FitzGerald wrote:
I've been asked to produce a series of Excel spreadsheets with train timetable information for a number of National Rail (London only) routes. Besides using the Network Rail journey planner and manually typing/pasting them in, is there any way of getting this information into Excel? It's getting a bit complicated and time consuming! Thanks, David. Have a look at: http://persoenlicherfahrplan.bahn.de...ry-p2w.exe/en? Won't do Excel, but will create PDF files, or files suitable to be read in Palm Organisers. Don't be put off that it's a German site - works beautifully for UK services & does connections, where needed too... -- Adam (Remove ".N*0*S*P*A*M" from email to reply!)... |
Train Timetables in MS Excel format
Adam Jackson wrote:
Have a look at: http://persoenlicherfahrplan.bahn.de...ry-p2w.exe/en? Won't do Excel, but will create PDF files, or files suitable to be read in Palm Organisers. Don't be put off that it's a German site - works beautifully for UK services & does connections, where needed too... This looks very promising. I used the J2ME version, specifying London to Streatham. Unfortunately it assumed I meant Victoria rather than a general query, which I suppose is unsurprising. Will definitely play around with this when I have time later. Dan |
Train Timetables in MS Excel format
In message , David
FitzGerald writes I've been asked to produce a series of Excel spreadsheets with train timetable information for a number of National Rail (London only) routes. Besides using the Network Rail journey planner and manually typing/pasting them in, is there any way of getting this information into Excel? It's getting a bit complicated and time consuming! I don't know about the other TOCs, but SWT published its timetables in PDF format: http://www.swtrains.co.uk/traintimes/ -- Paul Terry |
Train Timetables in MS Excel format
"David FitzGerald" wrote in message om... I've been asked to produce a series of Excel spreadsheets with train timetable information for a number of National Rail (London only) routes. Besides using the Network Rail journey planner and manually typing/pasting them in, is there any way of getting this information into Excel? It's getting a bit complicated and time consuming! For those TOCs who publish timetables on their website in PDF format, could you do a cut/paste from acrobat reader into Excel ? |
Train Timetables in MS Excel format
Matt Wheeler wrote:
"David FitzGerald" wrote in message om... I've been asked to produce a series of Excel spreadsheets with train timetable information for a number of National Rail (London only) routes. Besides using the Network Rail journey planner and manually typing/pasting them in, is there any way of getting this information into Excel? It's getting a bit complicated and time consuming! For those TOCs who publish timetables on their website in PDF format, could you do a cut/paste from acrobat reader into Excel ? I tried with one of the SWT timetables. You can cut and paste, but the content gets garbled extensively in the process. Even the Column Select tool doesn't seem to be much use, as it ignores blank entries in the column. Text Select does the same horizontally. Possibly a Visual Basic program could be written to disentangle it, but it doesn't look at all easy. -- Richard J. (to e-mail me, swap uk and yon in address) |
Train Timetables in MS Excel format
I've been asked to produce a series of Excel spreadsheets with train
timetable information for a number of National Rail (London only) routes. Besides using the Network Rail journey planner and manually typing/pasting them in, is there any way of getting this information into Excel? It's getting a bit complicated and time consuming! Thanks, David. With trains which are at all regular there is the addition trick: For a regular 15 minute interval, say, you could type something like: =b2+(15/1440) in cell c2, then cut and paste as required. If a station is always, say, 3 minutes on from the previous one, you could use: =b2+(3/1440) in cell b3, then cut and paste as required. The important step is to set the number type in the cells to hh:mm, then remember the colon as you enter each point! With these things done, it's lighter work, but it's still a bit of a challenge. If you like, e-mail me ) and I'll send you a sample of a fantasy 2 hour period on the Midland Main Line I've created for totally different purposes. |
Train Timetables in MS Excel format
In message , Richard J.
writes I tried with one of the SWT timetables. You can cut and paste, but the content gets garbled extensively in the process. Even the Column Select tool doesn't seem to be much use, as it ignores blank entries in the column. Text Select does the same horizontally. Possibly a Visual Basic program could be written to disentangle it, but it doesn't look at all easy. Surely it would be better to invest in one of the conversion utilities available, given the extent of the job? Able2Extract (A2E) is one of those that claims to convert from PDF to Excel (I've not tried it myself): http://www.investintech.com/able2extract.html -- Paul Terry |
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