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#1
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I wish to convert a colum file of email addresses in Excel to a Word file
with a comma after each address? I copy in Excel but the cell/chart structure is maintained when I paste into Word. What should I do? The purpose is to email address books. |
#2
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When you paste into excel, did you try to Paste Special - Unformatted text?
-- HTH, Barb Reinhardt If this post was helpful to you, please click YES below. "Mike A." wrote: I wish to convert a colum file of email addresses in Excel to a Word file with a comma after each address? I copy in Excel but the cell/chart structure is maintained when I paste into Word. What should I do? The purpose is to email address books. |
#3
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Assuming you have your addresses in Col A in Excel
Enter this in B1 =A1&"," and copy down to the last row with address in A Select Col B Open Word document Choose Edit|Paste Special|Unformatted Text You will get a list of addresses with "," at the end. If you want them in one line in Word then do this -- To get my email id paste my address in an Excel cell and press Enter... Enter this in B1 =A1&"," Enter this in B2 and copy down =B1&A2&"," Select the last cell only and paste in word... "Mike A." wrote: I wish to convert a colum file of email addresses in Excel to a Word file with a comma after each address? I copy in Excel but the cell/chart structure is maintained when I paste into Word. What should I do? The purpose is to email address books. |
#4
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Sheeloo wrote on Mon, 13 Oct 2008 10:03:02 -0700:
Enter this in B1 =A1&"," and copy down to the last row with address in A Select Col B Open Word document Choose Edit|Paste Special|Unformatted Text You will get a list of addresses with "," at the end. If you want them in one line in Word then do this -- To get my email id paste my address in an Excel cell and press Enter... Enter this in B1 =A1&"," Enter this in B2 and copy down =B1&A2&"," Select the last cell only and paste in word... "Mike A." wrote: I wish to convert a colum file of email addresses in Excel to a Word file with a comma after each address? I copy in Excel but the cell/chart structure is maintained when I paste into Word. What should I do? The purpose is to email address books. Another and similar way is not to convert in Excel, copy, Paste Special in Word and then replace all ^p (paragraph mark) with , (space comma) -- James Silverton Potomac, Maryland Email, with obvious alterations: not.jim.silverton.at.verizon.not |
#5
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James wrote to Sheeloo on Mon, 13 Oct 2008 13:27:45 -0400:
Enter this in B1 =A1&"," and copy down to the last row with address in A Select Col B Open Word document Choose Edit|Paste Special|Unformatted Text You will get a list of addresses with "," at the end. If you want them in one line in Word then do this -- To get my email id paste my address in an Excel cell and press Enter... Enter this in B1 =A1&"," Enter this in B2 and copy down =B1&A2&"," Select the last cell only and paste in word... "Mike A." wrote: I wish to convert a colum file of email addresses in Excel to a Word file with a comma after each address? I copy in Excel but the cell/chart structure is maintained when I paste into Word. What should I do? The purpose is to email address books. Another and similar way is not to convert in Excel, copy, Paste Special in Word and then replace all ^p (paragraph mark) with , (space comma) -- Sorry, that should have been (comma space) of course. -- James Silverton Potomac, Maryland Email, with obvious alterations: not.jim.silverton.at.verizon.not |
#7
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Hello Barb,
You misunderstood. I want to transfer a column of email addresses on Excel through copy and paste into a Word file. Subsequently, I wish to copy and paste the Word file into an email on MSN Hotmail and send. Thanks for your help. I am using Office 2000. You can respond directly if you wish to: "Barb Reinhardt" wrote: When you paste into excel, did you try to Paste Special - Unformatted text? -- HTH, Barb Reinhardt If this post was helpful to you, please click YES below. "Mike A." wrote: I wish to convert a colum file of email addresses in Excel to a Word file with a comma after each address? I copy in Excel but the cell/chart structure is maintained when I paste into Word. What should I do? The purpose is to email address books. |
#8
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Paste it into Notepad NOT Word. That will remove the formatting that is
causing you problems Mike A. wrote: Hello Barb, You misunderstood. I want to transfer a column of email addresses on Excel through copy and paste into a Word file. Subsequently, I wish to copy and paste the Word file into an email on MSN Hotmail and send. Thanks for your help. I am using Office 2000. You can respond directly if you wish to: "Barb Reinhardt" wrote: When you paste into excel, did you try to Paste Special - Unformatted text? -- HTH, Barb Reinhardt If this post was helpful to you, please click YES below. "Mike A." wrote: I wish to convert a colum file of email addresses in Excel to a Word file with a comma after each address? I copy in Excel but the cell/chart structure is maintained when I paste into Word. What should I do? The purpose is to email address books. |
#9
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Mike wrote on Tue, 14 Oct 2008 02:24:00 -0700:
I tried your formula and it worked to an extent, keeping all Let me repeat my somewhat abbreviated instructions. Suppose there are a lot of email addresses in column A of a spreadsheet.I'm using an older Excel 2002 too. 1. Select the addresses or column A. 2..CTRL-C to copy 3.Open Word document and click copy position 4.EditPaste SpecialUnformatted textOK 5. Select the addresses 6.EditFind what ^pReplace with , {put a space after the comma}Replace AllOK In case of transmission glitches, "^p" is carat lower case "p" and I just tried it and only the last address needs the comma removed. -- James Silverton Potomac, Maryland Email, with obvious alterations: not.jim.silverton.at.verizon.not |
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