hi, is it possible to run all errored rows in a table?
Yes, you can run all errored rows in a table. Right-click on the column, click Play, and then select Run All Rows that haven't run or have errors. This will process only the rows that previously had errors or haven't been run yet. Alternatively, you can use the "Errored Rows" view to focus specifically on rows where errors occurred, and then run those rows.
no i am looking for a way run all errored rows in all columns of the table with one click
Hi Maxim, thanks for your message - unfortunately we don't currently support a logic to re-run errored cells at the moment. I will make sure to pass your feedback on to our product team who's actively looking to build this logic out in the product. Could you share some context on what actions are causing these elevated error rates?
I think currently, there isn’t a feature that allows you to rerun all the errored rows in a table at once. If your goal for running multiple columns together is to gather a specific data point across multiple sources for maximum coverage, the Waterfall feature might be a good fit. It lets you run columns sequentially until the desired data point is found. However, keep in mind that not all columns will necessarily be executed, the process stops as soon as the data point is found. If your use case differs from this and you need to rerun all errored rows across multiple different column types giving unique results, the Waterfall feature may not fully address your needs. You can consider posting a feature request in the feedback channel. For example, you could suggest the ability to run all rows, the first 10 rows, or specifically all errored rows across a group of columns. Some useful links: https://www.clay.com/waterfall-enrichment https://www.clay.com/university/guide/building-a-data-waterfall
Thanks for your input on this Khush. Just to clarify - we do not support programmatic re-runs, but you can re-run errored cells in a given view manually by clicking on the column header > run column > run all rows that have not run or have errors: