How To : Turn off Email Notifications in Outlook

by Mandar Vaze on November 24, 2009
in Productivity, tips

When I moved from manager’s role to that of Technical contributor, I realized that for Individual contributor, getting a continuous span of undisturbed time is very important to get something worth while done. At times like this, email notifications can be distraction that needs to be turned off.

Most of us are conditioned to respond to (or at least read) every email sent you immediately. But over a period of time, you realize the not every email needs immediate attention. While communication is important, the method need not always be email. If something is really time critical, (I have observed that) people you reach you by other means as well (apart from the email they sent you) Other emails are important by not time critical.

Default settings in outlook are to notify you (in multiple ways) of new email in your inbox. But do not need to know about each and every single email the instance it reaches your inbox. You can turn off these distractions by turning off the email notifications completely. But it is hidden very well by Microsoft :)

To turn off these notifications, navigate to the following location:

Tools->Options->Preferences->Email Options->Advanced Email Options

Now you will see screen similar to the one below. Uncheck all these check boxes.

Turn Off Email Notifications

Turn Off Email Notifications

While the above screen shot (and the location to reach this option) is taken from Outlook 2007, Options for other versions of outlook shouldn’t be very different.

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Importing CSV file data into sqlite3

by Mandar Vaze on July 13, 2009
in Code, Hack, Linux, Open Source, tips

The :en:SQLite logo as of 2007-12-15
Image via Wikipedia

I was trying to import the data from CSV file into sqlite3 database. Ideally this should be very simple task, with following the steps given in the sqlite tutorial. It is a matter of calling the sqlite command with separator argument, followed by an import operation, as listed below.

sqlite3 test.db  "create table t1 (t1key INTEGER PRIMARY KEY,data TEXT);"
sqlite3 -separator , test.db ".import some.csv t1"

Except that main attribute of my CSV file was that it could contain single records with embedded comma. I was hoping that sqlite3 would be smart enough to detect that the fields were enclosed within double quotes and then separate by comma. But I soon realized that only a code specifically dealing with CSV would know about this.  As we can see in the example above, the import is a generic code and as a user I listed comma as a separator.

My Data looked something like this :

"1","data1"
"2","data2,data3"

So like any *nix geek would do, I tried providing double quote and comma as a separator. To my surprise it worked very well. I though separator would take only single character, and I had provided two (three?). Anyway, important thing to remember is to escape the single quote with a backslash (I didn’t try it without the backslash, may be that would work too)

So here is the syntax that worked :

sqlite3 -separator \", test.db ".import mydata.csv mytbl"

Update : Turns out SQLite Manager is much better solution after all.  It is an Extension for Firefox and other apps to manage any sqlite database. Not only it took care of above situation, it also handled empty cells as well where the command line failed with following error message :

line 4: expected 3 columns of data but found 2

Data with missing cells : Notice two successive commas :

"1","data1","data2"
"2","data3,data4","data5"
"3",,"data6"
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Reading CSV files in IronPython

stylized depiction of a csv text file
Image via Wikipedia

This is in continuation with my previous blog post :

To get IronPython to use Standard Python Modules,  one needs to add the following two lines to C:\IronPython-2.0.1\Lib\site.py :

import sys
sys.path.append(r"C:\Python25\Lib")

While this works for most part, it doesn’t help if you are using Python extensions written in C. More about my specific problems in another post. But there is an open source project IronClad to deal specifically with this issue. In the meantime, you can check the differences between IronPython and CPython

Reading (and writing to) CSV file is critical part of my program, while in stadard python it was as easy as “import csv”, the same thing took some efforts to get it working in IronPython. I got the following error for my import statement

Error on line 7 in csv.py
from functools import reduce

I also tried using ActiveState Python 2.5.2.2 (which I already had from few months ago, didn’t feel like downloading the latest version till the problem was fixed) But that didn’t help either. With ActiveState, I got the same error on the same line, except this time it was for _csv.

To Quote from IronPython Cookbook :

For some reason the Python standard library csv module is written in C, which means that it isn’t available to IronPython.

The cookbook points to a third party library called A Fast Csv Reader . The cookbook has a nice example of how to use the said DLL with your IronPython Program.

It wasn’t clear to me as to why I had to register at Code Project to download this binary since it is provided under MIT Open Source License. But whom am I gonna complain to ? Beggars can’t be choosers :(

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