Start a command prompt, navigate to the MARC Report installation folder, then type 'mconcat'.
If the program utilities are installed, you will see the following:
C:\program files\tmq\marc report>mconcat mconcat 1.1: commandline Concatenate File utility, ⌐2011-2014, TMQ, Inc. Command-line parameters: --help show this parameter list --source file(s) to be concatenated; use CSV format if more than one --target the file to which the source file(s) will be added --hide suppress windows progress bar --version display the program version Usage: mconcat --source="file 1.mrc","file 2.mrc" --target="2 files.mrc" --hide NB.: Do not use blanks after the commas in the source list
The instructions are simple enough. The program requires a list of one or more source files, and one target file. Each source file will be appended to the end of the target file in the order that it is entered. If the target file does not exist when the program begins, it will be created.
This utility works on any type of file, as it performs a raw or binary concatenation. However, when running on files of MARC records, the program has the added advantage of printing the total number of MARC records concatenated when it is finished.
All filenames should be quoted; the purpose of this is to prevent blank spaces in filenames from generating unwanted command-line parameters.
Multiple sourcefiles should be separated by a single comma. Again, do not format the list of files using blank spaces after the commas.
To summarise this point, the following syntax is good:
--source="my first file.mrc","my second file.mrc","my third file.mrc"
And the following syntax is bad:
--source="my first file.mrc", "my second file.mrc", "my third file.mrc"
The reason for repeating/belaboring this point is that in the second case, the program will discard the second and third filenames without generating an error (because that is how it handles unrecognized parameters), and thus the result will be a target that contains only “my first file.mrc”