Back to

Running scripts

Uploading characters in Japanese to SAP

You can use Transaction to upload characters from Excel to SAP. There are two ways to do this:

Shift-JIS upload

In this method, the data has already been converted to Shift-JIS. Map the Shift-JIS data to the SAP field and run the Transaction script.

Direct upload from Excel to SAP

In this method, Transaction reads the Japanese characters, converts them to Shift-JIS, and then sends them to SAP, all in one step.

  1. Click the Editor button.
  2. Insert +MB1 anywhere before the +Tx command.

    With this command, Transaction will check whether it needs to perform the appropriate conversion for each cell that it reads so that SAP can get the correct character sets. After you set this command, Transaction will look for the first row of the mapped column for special instructions.

  3. In the Excel data file, select the first row, right-click, and click Insert to add a row above the Header row.
  4. In each column that contains Japanese characters, type *DB932 in the new first row.

    In this example, when Transaction reads columns B and C, it will convert the actual data to the Shift-JIS character set (code page 932). Transaction will not convert the data in column A, because it is not marked for conversion.

    Notes:
    About 398 characters might not get converted correctly to Shift-JIS. This is a well-known issue with conversion from Unicode to Shift-JIS, and this issue might exist in any alternate method that you use. For a complete list of these characters, and to learn more about this issue, refer to the Microsoft Knowledge Base article PRB: Conversion Problem Between Shift-JIS and Unicode (170559).

    Every Excel value that is being uploaded will be checked for conversion and, if required, will be converted to Shift-JIS. This might slow down the upload process.

Other languages

In step 4 of the direct upload method, type the value that corresponds to the language that is in your data.

Language

Value for Excel

Simplified Chinese GBK

*DB936

Traditional Chinese Big5

*DB950

Korean

*DB949

Also in this section

Running multiple or linked files

Scheduling runs

Run options, troubleshooting errors, and Launch GUI

Advanced run settings

Writing Headers

Publishing macros in an Excel workbook

Uploading long text

Windows scripting