![]() ![]() Then in your program parse the folder's text files, get their content as string, and parse the table IDS from filename, the rest is updating your table with that information. Then use 'hot folder' utility to OCR all files, by having the same filename with TXT extention (It is set from 'hot folder' settings). If your plan is to batch process them and write the contents to a Database, you can also do a programmatical trick to overcome such limitation, as I did recently in one of my projects (It is a bit offline-way but it is simple and works) : While parsing the files and putting them to your Database table from your program, move (or copy) them all into a folder while changing their filename to include an ID from your Database table. There also offer a comprehensive API for programmers : If you want to make OCR batch processing from your program, they sell another software, called 'ABBYY Recoginition Server'. For batch processing, it offers HOT FOLDER utility inside it (from GUI). Unfortunately, Such a professional OCR software doesn't support command line utilities. Bc 1: Ti v và gii nén Bc 2: Chy file. Hng Dn Cài t ABBYY FineReader 15 Chi Tit. FineCmd.exe located in FR directory where you installed it Download ABBYY FineReader 15 - link ti Google drive Kích thc: 306 MB Link ti ti chính thc: DOWNLOAD. This command opens FR ui, processes the file and then closes it (if you pass argument /quit). (MSWord, MSExcel, WordPro, WordPerfect, StarWriter, Mail, Clipboard, WebBrowser, Acrobat, PowerPoint) Target - name of target app where to open ![]() (txt, rtf, doc, docx, xml, htm(l), xls, xlsx, ppt, pptx, pdf, dbf, csv, lit) ::= /out ExportFile | /send Target, whereĮxportFile - name of file with extension to save file to Language - name of language in English (russian, greek, Mixed) SourceName - images source (scanner) if not specified, current is usedįilename. ImageFiles - list of files for recognition FineCmd.exe PRESS2.TIFF /lang Mixed /out C:\temp\result.txt /quit Works with FR12, didn't tested with earlier versions. While doing my OCR research project, found one. ![]()
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