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	<title>Comments on: Resurrecting Old Posts</title>
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	<description>(a Weblog by Jason Diamond)</description>
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		<title>By: otakucode</title>
		<link>http://jason.diamond.name/weblog/2009/09/09/resurrecting-old-posts/comment-page-1/#comment-330</link>
		<dc:creator>otakucode</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 10 Apr 2010 03:53:27 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>Actually, I stumbled across your site because I was searching to see if anyone had any code out there, preferably in C#, that involved parsing the IMDB data files they make available on their FTP site.  It seems that you indeed had an article about this awhile back, using LINQ to do it.  I&#039;m interested to see how you used LINQ and how you dealt with some of the files with horrendous formatting (movies.list is giving me a headache trying to come up with a regex that fits the dozens of different formats they mash all together).

The original URL for the entry was apparently:
http://jason.diamond.name/weblog/2008/09/07/processing-text-files-with-linq</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Actually, I stumbled across your site because I was searching to see if anyone had any code out there, preferably in C#, that involved parsing the IMDB data files they make available on their FTP site.  It seems that you indeed had an article about this awhile back, using LINQ to do it.  I&#8217;m interested to see how you used LINQ and how you dealt with some of the files with horrendous formatting (movies.list is giving me a headache trying to come up with a regex that fits the dozens of different formats they mash all together).</p>
<p>The original URL for the entry was apparently:<br />
<a href="http://jason.diamond.name/weblog/2008/09/07/processing-text-files-with-linq" rel="nofollow">http://jason.diamond.name/weblog/2008/09/07/processing-text-files-with-linq</a></p>
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