![]() You'll now have all the "Field X Value" columns with blank columns in between. Then move all the "Field X Hidden" columns over to the right, again in order. The Category column will have to be moved as well in the same manner, of course. To do this, select the column with the mouse (hover over Excel's lettered column header until the mouse pointer turns to a downarrow and then click), press Ctrl+X to cut the column, move over to a blank column way over on the right, and press Ctrl+V to paste. Move all the "Field X Label" columns over to the right, in order. Delete all 6 columns that deal with those two fields now. Make a note of which records will have to be patched up (for me, there were 6 out of about 300). You need to look at those two columns to see if you've used them at all for any data records. Now it gets messy since we have to rearrange the columns, and furthermore we have to delete the columns for fields 9 and 10 (SplashID has no "room" for them). No, I don't know why.)Ĭolumn C (Title) is now in the right place for SplashID's item name/description. Instead of counting across and row by row, count down and column by column. Images are numbered from 0 in the image list in SplashID. This is the image number of the "head" from SplashID's image list. That's the record identifier for SplashID. Leave the column header row, since it'll help identify the fields once we start rearranging the columns, since SplashID expects the fields in a different order.įirst, put an 'F' in column A for each data row. Delete all the template records.įield 1 Label, Field 1 Value, Field 1 Hiddenįield 2 Label, Field 2 Value, Field 2 Hiddenįield 10 Label, Field 10 Value, Field 10 Hidden At the top of the actual records are all the individual data items from Passwords Plus (the entry in the first column is 0), and if you scroll down you'll see the template records (the entry in the first column is 1). ![]() ![]() The second row are the column headers (or the field names, if you like) for the fields in each record. You'll see that the first row is just version information. Dismiss the warning dialog, and then save the CSV file to your USB drive. We should really wipe them once the conversion is over and not leave them hanging around on your hard disk (say, in the Recycle Bin). We're going to be creating plaintext (that is, readable) CSV files containing all your passwords. You will require Excel, or any program that can open a CSV file in a spreadsheet-like form.įirst of all, get a USB drive that you can reformat. At the time I only mentioned the format of the VID files for SplashID, but didn't provide any information on how to do the conversion. In the post I wrote a couple of weeks ago on SplashID, I mentioned that I'd converted my data from Passwords Plus using CSV files. Once you enter in the sync settings, Passwords Plus will sync and your data will come from the secure cloud onto your device.Converting data from Passwords Plus to SplashID You can find your Sync ID by having it emailed to you OR by looking in your Sync Settings on another device that is syncing to the same Passwords Plus account. Note that the email address is case sensitive. ![]()
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