Can we convert XML to PDF by watson Document conversion service please, I have seen the other way is possible, how to convert XML to PDF by any existing service of Bluemix/Watson?
No, sorry - as far as I know, there are no services on Bluemix for generating PDF files.
Related
I have been trying to find an answer to this question, but can't seem to have any luck.
Is it possible to upload a document to Watson Discovery via Watson Assistant?
If so, could anyone point me in the right direction?
There is nothing out of the box that could do as you ask. Discovery does now come with a number of mechanisms to populate collections, i.e. Box, Web and sharepoint crawlers along with a manual upload. Non of these are integrated with Watson assistant.
That's not to say what you are looking for cannot be done, but you would need to build the mechanism yourself. As an example you could create a response payload (json packet ) within Watson Assistant that triggers some client code which performs an upload. This upload could then directly push the document into a discovery collection via discovery's API methods.
I am trying to upload the file into google app engine from where I would like to retrieve it and then perform conversion into a pdf file. I want to have a cloud access so I am deploying this project. But I dont the best way to go about it. Can anyone help please ? Or is there any solution to directly convert the file while being on the server ?
I don't think there are any ways to convert a file directly on the server. But to store and retrieve, you might want to take a look into the Google Cloud Storage client library (and the one from Python, if needed).
These might help as well (Java and Python). From there you can easily save a file, then retrieve it. Once you retrieve it, do your conversion to pdf and voila!
I am looking for way to build reports using SSRS from JIRA if that is not possible I am okay moving the data from Jira to a SQL DB utilizing SSIS. I am new to Jira and REST API. Connecting directly to the Jira back end Database is not an option
The jira api currently only supports JSON. so your best bet is to either build a custom reporting services extension to handle JSON as a data source or create a webservice that passes through the json calls and converts the results to xml which SSRS will be able to handle.
while both of these sound difficult depending on your requirements may only take a few lines of C# code:
there also seem to be a few 3rd party options but I haven't tried them
Im building a simple angular application and there is a small administrator panel for updating the content (a .json document). I'm looking for a way to edit the json document from the administrator panel.
I can manipulate the memory-loaded json but I can't save it. Is there a way to put the json file in some kind of cloud database and connect to it without setting up a server or backend for my application?
I want my application to be easily deployable on any ftp so I can't setup a nodeserver or install something like couchdb.
Any ideas are appreciated.
You could use a provider like Parse. It's free (up to a limit of requests/month), has a nice JavaScript SDK that would get you up and running quickly. https://parse.com/
Also, check out this query builder to aid in retrieving your data from Parse. It's built as an Angular service for easy integration. https://github.com/dpollot/parse-query
EDIT
Parse also offers hosting, for free.
I am just getting started with Google Web Toolkit and Google App Engine and have a quick question. I think I understand how to use the datastore now but I was wondering if there is a way that I can quickly create a "database" with static data from an excel sheet? I just need to add some data for a proof of concept later this week.
I am picturing something similar to a SQL database browser where I can just import the data?
I developing in Eclipse with appropriate plugins.
Thanks,
Rob
The easiest way to do this would be to save your spreadsheet as a CSV file, then use the bulkloader to load it into the datastore.
Your best bet is probably to write something to handle uploading it, or to handle processing it on the server.
However, you should also look at the bulk loader. It might be able to save you a little bit of time.
Here is the API (Google Documents List API) that "allows client applications to programmatically access and manipulate user data stored with Google Documents".