+TurtlesEdge Posted June 10, 2010 Share Posted June 10, 2010 When I download a GPX file it seems to truncate some of the logs at a certain point, is there anyway to get every log in a GPX file all the time? Link to comment
+dfx Posted June 10, 2010 Share Posted June 10, 2010 not without additional tools (GSAK and the likes) and some black magic. Link to comment
+BBosman Posted June 10, 2010 Share Posted June 10, 2010 The downloaded GPX file contains the 20 most recent logs. (And GPX from a Pocket Query contain only the 5 most recent) There is no supported way to get all logs from a cache, because Groundspeak tries to discourage the use of offline databases and therefore won't offer a lot of features to help creating one. If you use a program like GSAK, there are macro's which can help though. The question is, why would you need all logs from a cache? Link to comment
+TurtlesEdge Posted June 10, 2010 Author Share Posted June 10, 2010 The downloaded GPX file contains the 20 most recent logs. (And GPX from a Pocket Query contain only the 5 most recent) There is no supported way to get all logs from a cache, because Groundspeak tries to discourage the use of offline databases and therefore won't offer a lot of features to help creating one. If you use a program like GSAK, there are macro's which can help though. The question is, why would you need all logs from a cache? I was generating some stats with GSAK and I noticed that some of figures seemed wrong, such as number of finders of my caches. Thanks for the explanation though. Link to comment
+BBosman Posted June 10, 2010 Share Posted June 10, 2010 If you're using GSAK and just want to use it on your own caches you can try a GSAK macro like AddLogs. But keep in mind that overuse/abuse of the macro can get you banned! Link to comment
+Hitech MD Posted June 10, 2010 Share Posted June 10, 2010 If you're using GSAK and just want to use it on your own caches you can try a GSAK macro like AddLogs. But keep in mind that overuse/abuse of the macro can get you banned! Addlogs doesn't need to be run very often if you keep up with your caches' logs. I run it once in a blue moon because it also catches changes in logs and that occasional logger that was with someone and is now logging under thier new account months later. Link to comment
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