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#1
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I know how to create a template with customized features and formats for when
I create a new workbook or worksheet, but these customized setting do not seem to apply when I open a file. I am trying to figure out how to change the default number format when I open a CSV file. I do want it to be scientific with six significant decimal places, but I can't seem to figure out a way to do this. I have read quite a few books and spent several hours searching the internet, but I have come up empty handed. How can I accomplish this. By the way, I am running Excel 2003 right now but upgrading to Excel 2007 next week. -- chris.bowers |
#2
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Opening a CSV file will not cause Excel to use your customized template.
You would have to copy and paste into a new workbook created from your template rather than open the CSV file directly. Gord Dibben MS Excel MVP On Fri, 5 Sep 2008 13:13:26 -0700, christopher.bowers wrote: I know how to create a template with customized features and formats for when I create a new workbook or worksheet, but these customized setting do not seem to apply when I open a file. I am trying to figure out how to change the default number format when I open a CSV file. I do want it to be scientific with six significant decimal places, but I can't seem to figure out a way to do this. I have read quite a few books and spent several hours searching the internet, but I have come up empty handed. How can I accomplish this. By the way, I am running Excel 2003 right now but upgrading to Excel 2007 next week. |
#3
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Gord
Thanks for your reply, but that is really not what I am after. I already do what you mentioned, and have others do it, but I am looking for a way to configure Excel so that copying and pasting values from one worksheet to another, or reformatting numbers after a CSV file is opened, is not necessary. There must be a way of doing this, I just have to find the person that knows how. Chris Bowers |
#4
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Lotsa luck finding the right person.
As I said...................when opening a CSV file, Excel uses the default workbook, not your customized template. Gord On Mon, 15 Sep 2008 08:54:01 -0700, christopher.bowers wrote: Gord Thanks for your reply, but that is really not what I am after. I already do what you mentioned, and have others do it, but I am looking for a way to configure Excel so that copying and pasting values from one worksheet to another, or reformatting numbers after a CSV file is opened, is not necessary. There must be a way of doing this, I just have to find the person that knows how. Chris Bowers |
#5
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So, how do you modify the default settings? If you create a new default
template [book.xls] like I have any settings you change , such as number styles or fonts, only apply to a new workbook that you create. Where the settings for a CSV or other textfile that you open directly [without importing into an existing worksheet] come from I do not know and cannot seem to find out. I was really hoping that someone from Microsoft directly would answer this post, as I think that they will be able to provide the information that I need. Chris Bowers |
#6
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I doubt very much if anyone from MS is monoitoring these news groups but if
they happened to see your post you would get same reply as I have given. One more time................when you open a *.csv file directly, Excel will use the default application workbook. There is no way to alter that default workbook. Creating a BOOK.XLT template only ensures that FileNew workbooks are based upon that template. That template will not be recognized when opening *.csv files. My only and last suggestion is to create a macro in a new workbook to do your formatting after the *.csv file is opened. Save that workbook as an add-in which will load whenever Excel is opened. Run that macro on the workbook created by the *.csv file. Gord On Mon, 15 Sep 2008 14:13:01 -0700, christopher.bowers wrote: So, how do you modify the default settings? If you create a new default template [book.xls] like I have any settings you change , such as number styles or fonts, only apply to a new workbook that you create. Where the settings for a CSV or other textfile that you open directly [without importing into an existing worksheet] come from I do not know and cannot seem to find out. I was really hoping that someone from Microsoft directly would answer this post, as I think that they will be able to provide the information that I need. Chris Bowers |
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