It used to be integromat. You can look it up more easily, haha
I almost succeeded with it, but to integrate multiple entries in one document, it was too complicated.
So, I’m modifying the code I originally made to make API calls to Airtable, and I assemble the doc with docxtpl
I started by creating an API on my already functioning flask app, so everything can be done through Airtable page. But I was worried about opening an API to the world, so I decided to make a local python app that I’ll probably compile to .exe
And yes, I can open source, but it’s really tailored to me needs
Nice!
Secretary looks exactly like Docxtemplate, which I used on my homemade webpage. Maybe it’s a fork.
It never was really user friendly so I am looking to replace it. That is also the main issue with your self build solution? Or are there other issues as well?
Yes exactly. I need people to be able to use the tools easily and reliably and to be able to add templates themselves.
Also, my main job is not developing tools and I can only do it on my spare time, so the fastest it is to implement the better.
After a week to try, Airtable + Make seems to be the easiest. Airtable also offers to generate documents directly in it, but it lacks options.
My main issue with a lot of tool (except Docxtemplate or similar) is to renders array of data. Most solution replace a {{tag}} with an info, but what I would need is a {{array[i]}} and to be able to generate different paragraphs.
Thank you !
It’s pretty much the solution I already have: I generate a doc with DocxTemplate through a webpage made with Flask.
What I’m looking for is a solution with a user-friendly pipeline that can be easily used by anyone once it’s set up
Form > generate new entry in a db
Entry > Select entry from tags > generate documents from template
Airtable is already proposing something similar, which is why I’m currently trying it with zapier, Documint, and other automation solutions
I’m looking for a self host solution but mostly a free and polished one
Yes, that why I recommand jinja. as it can be used in OpenXML as well as latex or anything in plain text.
Let’s say you want to place a table that corresponds to a certain pattern, you could add it to your file conditionally. In your Word document, you could add that :
I don’t know .NET but you can probably call a Jinja tools
Also for the resume, you might be insterested in Rx Resume