Jump to content

LunaApeg

Members
  • Content Count

    2
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by LunaApeg

  1. LunaApeg

    company search tools question

    To find the main website URL and Google Business page of companies without needing to do any programming, you can start with a simple Google search by entering the company name along with the city and state. The official website and Google Business page often appear at the top of the search results. Additionally, visiting Google My Business and searching for the company name can provide you with the Google Business page if it exists. Another approach is to search for the company on LinkedIn, as many businesses have LinkedIn profiles that include their website URLs. You can also use directories like Yellow Pages or Yelp to search for the company, as these listings often include the company's website and other contact information. For more comprehensive business information or CRM enrichment, platforms like Global Database and Hunter.io can be useful, though some features might require a subscription. If you have any part of the domain name, you can use a Whois lookup service like whois.domaintools.com to search for it. Lastly, browser extensions like Hunter.io and Clearbit can quickly find company information, including websites, when you visit their social profiles or mention them online. Using these methods should help you find the main website URLs and Google Business pages for the companies on your list without the need for any programming skills.
  2. You'll need to parse the SWIFT messages to extract relevant fields and information. SWIFT messages are structured with specific fields that you need to handle programmatically. If you need to create SWIFT messages (MT940 in your case), you'll need to format the data according to SWIFT standards. RT940 refers to real-time MT940 messages. MT940 is a standard SWIFT message format for transmitting balance and transaction information for accounts. You'll need to parse these messages to extract account information, transactions, balances, and other relevant data. Here’s a basic example of how you might approach parsing an MT940 message in Delphi: procedure ParseMT940(Message: TStringList); var i: Integer; begin // Assume Message is a TStringList containing lines of the MT940 message for i := 0 to Message.Count - 1 do begin // Example: Parsing the statement line if StartsText(':61:', Message) then begin // Extract transaction details // Example: Date, Amount, Transaction Type, etc. // Parse fields according to the SWIFT MT940 specification // Example: // Date := Copy(Message, 5, 6); // Extract date // Amount := StrToFloat(Copy(Message, 16, Length(Message)-15)); end; // Example: Parsing the balance line if StartsText(':60F:', Message) then begin // Extract balance details // Example: Balance amount, Date, Currency, etc. // Example: // BalanceAmount := StrToFloat(Copy(Message, 7, Length(Message)-6)); end; // Continue parsing other lines as needed end; end;
×