Activity overview
Latest activity by JeremyL
Grant wrote: »
One thing you can do is to go to the little gear symbol on the left and click on it. There you can turn off all columns that are identical. It doesn't filter as such, but you'll only be left with the columns that have actual differences. That should make things a lot easier to deal with.
Thank you Grant, I was not aware of that feature. It helps slightly but still doesn't solve the root issue of scrolling through thousands/millions of records trying to find the few differences of a particular column. / comments
Grant wrote: »
One thing you can do is to go to the little gear symbol on the left and click on it. There you can turn off all columns that are identical. It doesn't filter as such, but you'll ...
Specifically in the "In both but different" tab, the column headers are highlighted to indicate somewhere in the rows, differences have been found. Currently, we must scroll to find the differences which will be highlighted. I would like to be able to filter (think Excel Auto Filter) for differences of a particular column. Not having this feature is a major pain when thousands/millions of differences are found across dozens of columns. One column could be responsible for the majority of differences but other columns might contain only a few differences. Rather than scrolling to find them through the thousands/millions of records, I want to filter to the differences of the column of my choosing. Sorting does not reveal the differences. / comments
Specifically in the "In both but different" tab, the column headers are highlighted to indicate somewhere in the rows, differences have been found. Currently, we must scroll to find the differences...
Filter to differences of a single compare column?
When comparing tables with large number of columns and differences are found in many columns, is it possible to select a single column and filter the displayed records to the differing values of sa...
Float Comparison - Decimals
I would like to define how many decimals out to compare floats via truncation, rounding, or even tolerance percent. E.g. an option to say "don't compare floats after the nth decimal" would be great...