I am still working on this script and everything seems to work perfect when I am watching it run, but at 5AM every morning when it is scheduled to run, something always seems to be causing it to hang? What is the best way for me to "capture" what could be causing this? I even got up one morning to watch it and it actually worked that day, which is the only day it has worked on its own?
Thanks, Reese Reese E. Walker Financial Systems Analyst Phoebe Putney Memorial Hospital Phone: (229) 312-4259 ________________________________ From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Walker, Reese Sent: Tuesday, October 09, 2007 9:47 AM To: [email protected] Subject: [Talk] I have two questions... 1) I am running a script to download some reports in STAR. Right now I have a one minute wait step after I accept the download screen b/c it could take a few seconds to as long a minute depending on the size of the reports for that day. How do I build the step to say wait until "Report Successfully Downloaded" is splashed on the screen to go to the next step? 2) I saw on a video that in order to use the scheduler BWS has to be opened, so what I am currently doing is using a windows scheduled task to open BWS about 5 minutes before I want to script to run and then using the schedule in the BWS to actually kick off the script. Is there a better way to do this? Surly I can save a runtime only script and set a windows scheduled task to kick it off, but so far it only opens the program but doesn't run the script. I realize my questions are elementary, but I am still learning and any help is greatly appreciated. Thanks, Reese Reese E. Walker Financial Systems Analyst Phoebe Putney Memorial Hospital Albany, GA. 31702 Phone: (229) 312-4259 Pager: (229) 431-7658 Fax: (229) 312-4316 ________________________________ Disclaimer: The HIPAA Final Privacy Rule requires covered entities to safeguard certain Protected Health Information (PHI) related to a person's healthcare. Information being faxed to you may include PHI after appropriate authorization from the patient or under circumstances that do not require patient authorization. You, the recipient, are obligated to maintain PHI in a safe and secure manner. You may not re-disclose without additional patient consent or as required by law. Unauthorized re-disclosure or failure to safeguard PHI could subject you to penalties described in federal (HIPAA) and state law. If you the reader of this message are not the intended recipient, or the employee or agent responsible to deliver it to the intended recipient, please notify us immediately and destroy the related message.
