scientific notation

T

T.Reisz

After reformatting an entire column to carry numbers with leading zeros as
text (employee data), empty cells will revert to scientific notation when new
data is input. How can I make text the default for all new data in a column?
 
S

Saruman

Enter an apostrophe before entering the data, the apostrophe does not print
or show up but tells excel that the contents is text. ie '012345 will show
in the cell as 012345 with a green triangle in the corner with a message tht
the cell is formatted as text or preceeded by an apostrophe.

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Saruman
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T.Reisz said:
After reformatting an entire column to carry numbers with leading zeros as
text (employee data), empty cells will revert to scientific notation when new
data is input. How can I make text the default for all new data in a
column?
 
T

T.Reisz

I appreciate the quick response.
I was aware of how to format for text for the individual cell and for an
entire column, but wanted to format the column once, not at every new entry -
it probably happened after I had closed the file and then reopened. Even
though the entire column had been formatted to text, new entries would
default to number format.

After submitting my question, I created a custom formatting ( \0######).
The \ keeps the leading 0 intact) and then created a template of the
worksheet (the only way to save the custom format).



There is a feature
 
D

Dave Peterson

If you format a column as text and then save that file as a normal excel
workbook (*.xls), the next time you open the workbook, that column should still
be formatted as text.

If you save as (say) a comma separated values file (*.csv), then all formatting
will be lost and you'll experience that problem.
 
T

T.Reisz

Yes, it should, but it doesn't, thus the question. Not dealing with .csv.
However, I've worked it out satisfactorily. Thanx
 

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