tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4084380583916091329.post358018714377331069..comments2022-05-23T10:55:58.890+01:00Comments on One Qlik at a Time: Back door access to your Qlikview reportChris Johnsonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05704093510036584239noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4084380583916091329.post-35149839451359590122012-06-23T10:57:52.583+01:002012-06-23T10:57:52.583+01:00Steve/Chris
You can open any document without dat...Steve/Chris<br /><br />You can open any document without data using the command line argument "nodata" as follows:<br /><br />C:\Program Files\QlikView\qv.exe /nodata C:\myFolder\myApplication.qvw<br /><br />Saves faffing around renaming files.<br /><br />MattMatt Fryerhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16375702764551893303noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4084380583916091329.post-66971815278690914812012-06-19T22:59:43.857+01:002012-06-19T22:59:43.857+01:00Like the tip about getting to the Sheets and Objec...Like the tip about getting to the Sheets and Objects properties from the Documents menu. ;-)<br /><br />Worth noting that you can only do the open without data if the document is in your recent items list (or at least that used to be the case). If you need to open without data a file that is not on that list you need to rename your document and create a new empty document with the same name. Open this to get it on the MRU list then close out. Delete the new document and rename back your original document - this can then be opened from Recently Opened Documents without data. This can be a life saver if you have a massive synthetic key appear in a document from a scripting error. It can cause problems of its own though if you have Section Access on though.Steve Darkhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10993281335305035357noreply@blogger.com