I really think it depends on what this means:
"(without even new line characters on the end)"
I'm not sure if that means that there is no linefeed, no carriage return or
what.
I do remember having to convert text files that came from a UNIX system so that
each line had the DOS CRLF at the end of each line instead of just the UNIX LF
characters.
Ron de Bruin wrote:
Hi David
No problem here with a new test when I use the exact steps from my site
I go to bed now but maybe Dave or ? can help you
If not I reply tomorrow after work
--
Regards Ron de Bruin
http://www.rondebruin.nl/tips.htm
"David Biddulph" <groups [at] biddulph.org.uk wrote in message ...
Interesting!
When I tried it, the resulting file had no new line between the input csv
files, and didn't even have a comma or anything, so the first field of the
second file was concatenated with the last field of the first file, and so
on, and when imported into Excel they were all on the same row..
I wonder what I'm doing different from your suggestion?
--
David Biddulph
"Ron de Bruin" wrote in message
...
Yes if the data is one row in every csv file it is one row in Excel when
you import the txt file
--
Regards Ron de Bruin
http://www.rondebruin.nl/tips.htm
"David Biddulph" <groups [at] biddulph.org.uk wrote in message
...
Will the method outlined in Example 1 deal with putting each line onto a
new row (which is what I *guessed* the OP may have wanted)?
--
David Biddulph
"Ron de Bruin" wrote in message
...
Hi RobinC
You can do it also without code if you want
http://www.rondebruin.nl/csv.htm
--
Regards Ron de Bruin
http://www.rondebruin.nl/tips.htm
"RobinC" wrote in message
...
I have a bunch of single line CSV files (without even new line
characters on the end) that I want to concatenate into a single file,
which I then want to work with in excel.
How can I do this?
--
Dave Peterson