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Unwanted data conversion in cells
I use Excel for only the simplist tasks. There is a reason my business name
is Wordsmith, not Numbersmith. One of the things I use it (Excel 2007) for is a simple spreadsheet with work done, date, and time spent in three columns. The date column has become a problem. I key in 7/5/2007, and it taken to converting this to just Jul-07. I need it to stay the way I keyed it and do not understand why it has started making this unwanted conversion. I can't get it to hold by typing in the date in text, ie, July 5, 2007. It makes the same conversion. How do I get it to stop deciding it knows better what I want than I do? I have been using this spreadsheet for several months, starting in version 2003. I save it as a 97-03 compatible file because I send it to a client at the end of each month. This feature of the program deciding it knows best is not helpful. I need to see the day as well as month and year, and that is what I type. All I want is for Excel to leave what I type alone. So far as I know, I have not told it to do anything differently. It just started with this month's spreadsheet, and I don't even know what this kind of conversion is called or why anyone would ever want such a thing. Thanks in advance. |
Unwanted data conversion in cells
You can pre-format the cells the way you want them. Click on a cell in
your date column, hold the <shift key down and press <page down a few times to highlight as many cells as you think you might need, then release the <shift key. (Or, you could just click on the column identifier letter at the top of the column to highlight the entire column of cells). With these cells highlighted, click on Format | Cells | Custom and in the small panel type the format you require - mm/dd/yyyy. Then click OK and from now on all the cells will display in this format. Hope this helps. Pete On Jul 5, 5:02 pm, WordsmithDan wrote: I use Excel for only the simplist tasks. There is a reason my business name is Wordsmith, not Numbersmith. One of the things I use it (Excel 2007) for is a simple spreadsheet with work done, date, and time spent in three columns. The date column has become a problem. I key in 7/5/2007, and it taken to converting this to just Jul-07. I need it to stay the way I keyed it and do not understand why it has started making this unwanted conversion. I can't get it to hold by typing in the date in text, ie, July 5, 2007. It makes the same conversion. How do I get it to stop deciding it knows better what I want than I do? I have been using this spreadsheet for several months, starting in version 2003. I save it as a 97-03 compatible file because I send it to a client at the end of each month. This feature of the program deciding it knows best is not helpful. I need to see the day as well as month and year, and that is what I type. All I want is for Excel to leave what I type alone. So far as I know, I have not told it to do anything differently. It just started with this month's spreadsheet, and I don't even know what this kind of conversion is called or why anyone would ever want such a thing. Thanks in advance. |
Unwanted data conversion in cells
Thu, 5 Jul 2007 09:02:04 -0700 from WordsmithDan
: I use Excel for only the simplist tasks. There is a reason my business name is Wordsmith, not Numbersmith. You might want to start using a spell checker, if you're going to boast of your English abilities. One of the things I use it (Excel 2007) for is a simple spreadsheet with work done, date, and time spent in three columns. The date column has become a problem. I key in 7/5/2007, and it taken to converting this to just Jul-07. I need it to stay the way I keyed it and do not understand why it has started making this unwanted conversion. I can't get it to hold by typing in the date in text, ie, July 5, 2007. It makes the same conversion. How do I get it to stop deciding it knows better what I want than I do? Are the dates going to be used in any calculations? If not, the easiest thing to do is format those cells as text before you type anything into them. Second easiest is to type a single quote (') before each date. It will show in the formula bar but not in the worksheet. Most versatile is to format the cells with the custom format m/d/yyyy. -- Stan Brown, Oak Road Systems, Tompkins County, New York, USA http://OakRoadSystems.com/ |
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