Skip to content

MelissaData/ProfilerObject-Java

Repository files navigation

Melissa Profiler Object Windows Java

Purpose

This code showcases the Melissa Profiler Object using Java.

Please feel free to copy or embed this code to your own project. Happy coding!

For the latest Melissa Profiler Object release notes, please visit: https://releasenotes.melissa.com/on-premise-api/profiler-object/

For further details, please visit: https://docs.melissa.com/on-premise-api/profiler-object/profiler-object-quickstart.html

The console will ask the user for:

  • A csv that contains data that you would like to profile

And return

  • TableRecordCount
  • ColumnCount
  • ExactMatchDistinctCount
  • ExactMatchDupesCount
  • ExactMatchLargestGroup
  • ContactMatchDistinctCount
  • ContactMatchDupesCount
  • ContactMatchLargestGroup
  • HouseholdMatchDistinctCount
  • HouseholdMatchDupesCount
  • HouseholdMatchLargestGroup
  • AddressMatchDistinctCount
  • AddressMatchDupesCount
  • AddressMatchLargestGroup
  • States and Counts
  • Postal Patterns and Counts

Tested Environments

  • Windows 64-bit Java 19
  • Powershell 5.1
  • Melissa data files for 2025-Q3

Required File(s) and Programs

Binaries

This is the c++ code of the Melissa Object.

  • mdProfiler.dll

Data File(s)

  • mdProfiler.dat
  • mdProfiler.mc
  • mdProfiler.cfg

Getting Started

These instructions will get you a copy of the project up and running on your local machine for development and testing purposes. This project is compatible with Java 19

Install Java

Before starting, make sure that Java has been correctly installed on your machine and your environment paths are configured.

You can download Java here: https://www.oracle.com/java/technologies/downloads/

You can check that your environment is set up correctly by opening a command prompt window and typing the following: java --version

alt text

If you see the version number then you have installed Java and set up your environment paths correctly!

Set up Powershell settings

If running Powershell for the first time, you will need to run this command in the Powershell console: Set-ExecutionPolicy RemoteSigned. The console will then prompt you with the following warning shown in the image below.

  • Enter 'A'.
    • If successful, the console will not output any messages. (You may need to run Powershell as administrator to enforce this setting).

alt text


Download this project

git clone https://github.com/MelissaData/ProfilerObject-Java
cd ProfilerObject-Java

Set up Melissa Updater

Melissa Updater is a CLI application allowing the user to update their Melissa applications/data.


Different ways to get data file(s)

  1. Using Melissa Updater
    • It will handle all of the data download/path and dll(s) for you.
  2. If you already have the latest release zip, you can find the data file(s) in there
    • To pass in your own data file path directory, you may either use the '-dataPath' parameter or enter the data file path directly in interactive mode.
    • Comment out this line "DownloadDataFiles -license $License" in the powershell script.
    • This will prevent you from having to redownload all the files.

Run Powershell Script

Parameters:

  • -file: a test csv file

    This is convenient when you want to get results for a specific csv file in one run instead of testing multiple csv files in interactive mode.

  • -dataPath (optional): a data file path directory to test the Profiler Object

  • -license (optional): a license string to test the Profiler Object

  • -quiet (optional): add to the command if you do not want to get any console output from the Melissa Updater

    When you have modified the script to match your data location, let's run the script. There are two modes:

  • Interactive

    The script will prompt the user for a csv file, then use the provided inputs to test Profiler Object. For example:

    .\MelissaProfilerObjectWindowsJava.ps1
    

    For quiet mode:

    .\MelissaProfilerObjectWindowsJava.ps1 -quiet
    
  • Command Line

    You can pass a csv file and a license string into the -file and -license parameters respectively to test Profiler Object. For example:

    .\MelissaProfilerObjectWindowsJava.ps1 -file "MelissaProfilerObjectSampleInput.csv"
    .\MelissaProfilerObjectWindowsJava.ps1 -file "MelissaProfilerObjectSampleInput.csv" -license "<your_license_string>"
    

    For quiet mode:

    .\MelissaProfilerObjectWindowsJava.ps1 -file "MelissaProfilerObjectSampleInput.csv"  -quiet
    .\MelissaProfilerObjectWindowsJava.ps1 -file "MelissaProfilerObjectSampleInput.csv"  -license "<your_license_string>" -quiet
    

This is the expected output from a successful setup for interactive mode:

alt text

Troubleshooting

Troubleshooting for errors found while running your program.

Errors:

Error Description
ErrorRequiredFileNotFound Program is missing a required file. Please check your Data folder and refer to the list of required files above. If you are unable to obtain all required files through the Melissa Updater, please contact technical support below.
ErrorLicenseExpired Expired license string. Please contact technical support below.

Contact Us

For free technical support, please call us at 800-MELISSA ext. 4 (800-635-4772 ext. 4) or email us at tech@Melissa.com.

To purchase this product, contact Melissa sales department at 800-MELISSA ext. 3 (800-635-4772 ext. 3).

About

This project shows how to get started with Melissa Profiler Object using Java.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published