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Hi - could really use a hand here, ladies & gentlemen:
I've got a very large Word document containing one very large table of information. The table is 7 columns wide by god-knows how many rows. Each cell of the table contains alphanumeric data, and from 0-4 carriage returns. I'd like to manipulate the data in this table in Excel. The problem is that when I copy and paste this table into Excel, the Word table cells that contained multiple carriage returns are converted into vertically-stacked groups of Excel cells, one per carriage return. The Word table cells that didn't contain carriage returns, however, are converted into *vertically merged* blocks of cells that are exactly as high as the vertically-stacked groups on that row. So the end product of converting one row of Word cells is a horizontally-laid-out grouping of vertically-stacked Excel cells - each "column-block" of Excel cells is as high as its neighbor, such that the information *looks* the same as it did in Word. But it would take me days to go through and cut & paste the information that has been spread out into multiple cells, then "unmerging" the merged cells, then deleting the blank cells I just created. Is it perhaps possible to avoid this by CTRL-H'ing the carriage returns into something else? Or using a special cut-n-paste or "data import" technique? Much obliged. |
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On May 7, 7:29 am, Guest3731
wrote: Hi - could really use a hand here, ladies & gentlemen: I've got a very large Word document containing one very large table of information. The table is 7 columns wide by god-knows how many rows. Each cell of the table contains alphanumeric data, and from 0-4 carriage returns. I'd like to manipulate the data in this table in Excel. The problem is that when I copy and paste this table into Excel, the Word table cells that contained multiple carriage returns are converted into vertically-stacked groups of Excel cells, one per carriage return. The Word table cells that didn't contain carriage returns, however, are converted into *vertically merged* blocks of cells that are exactly as high as the vertically-stacked groups on that row. So the end product of converting one row of Word cells is a horizontally-laid-out grouping of vertically-stacked Excel cells - each "column-block" of Excel cells is as high as its neighbor, such that the information *looks* the same as it did in Word. But it would take me days to go through and cut & paste the information that has been spread out into multiple cells, then "unmerging" the merged cells, then deleting the blank cells I just created. Is it perhaps possible to avoid this by CTRL-H'ing the carriage returns into something else? Or using a special cut-n-paste or "data import" technique? Much obliged. What if in Word you select the table then go Edit|Replace Find what: ^p Replace with: type a space then click Replace all then copy/paste into Excel. Try it out on a back up copy of the table first. Ken Johnson |
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