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Is it possible to change the default number format in Excel?
Is it possible to change the default number format in Excel?
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Answer: Is it possible to change the default number format in Excel?
Changing Default Number Format in Excel
From now on, any new workbooks you create in Excel will use the number format you selected as the default. If you want to change the number format for an existing workbook, you can do so by selecting the cells you want to format, right-clicking on them, and selecting Format Cells. From there, you can choose the number format you want to use. |
You can change it, but I bet you won't want to.
You can change the normal style of a workbook by: format|style|choose normal from the dropdown click on the modify button and change the format to what you want. First bad thing: Styles are kept with workbooks. So you'll have to do this to any new or existing workbook. Partial good thing: You can create a workbook template named book.xlt and store it in your XLStart folder. If you change the normal style for this template file, then any new workbook that you start by clicking the New icon on the standard toolbar will inherit this style. Second bad thing (and why I bet you won't do it): Dates are numbers. If you change the normal style to (say) two decimal, then type a date, you'll see the trouble. (Interesting, (well, to me anyway), typing a time doesn't cause the same trouble.) Andrew wrote: Is it possible to change the default number format in Excel? -- Dave Peterson |
Is it possible to change the default number format in Excel?
Hi...
Your advice - how does that apply to new Excel? Formatstylenormal doesn't exist in this version... For some crazy reason, as of yesterday, every workbook I open auto formats cells to "Accounting" format (those that used to be "General") - Why is this?! This is driving me crazy and costing me a lot of time to manually correct. Can I turn this off?! Thanks to help you can offer! "Dave Peterson" wrote: You can change it, but I bet you won't want to. You can change the normal style of a workbook by: format|style|choose normal from the dropdown click on the modify button and change the format to what you want. First bad thing: Styles are kept with workbooks. So you'll have to do this to any new or existing workbook. Partial good thing: You can create a workbook template named book.xlt and store it in your XLStart folder. If you change the normal style for this template file, then any new workbook that you start by clicking the New icon on the standard toolbar will inherit this style. Second bad thing (and why I bet you won't do it): Dates are numbers. If you change the normal style to (say) two decimal, then type a date, you'll see the trouble. (Interesting, (well, to me anyway), typing a time doesn't cause the same trouble.) Andrew wrote: Is it possible to change the default number format in Excel? -- Dave Peterson |
Is it possible to change the default number format in Excel?
Try Home tab, Styles Group, cell styles
(I didn't open xl2007 to verify, though.) Stef Gunn wrote: Hi... Your advice - how does that apply to new Excel? Formatstylenormal doesn't exist in this version... For some crazy reason, as of yesterday, every workbook I open auto formats cells to "Accounting" format (those that used to be "General") - Why is this?! This is driving me crazy and costing me a lot of time to manually correct. Can I turn this off?! Thanks to help you can offer! "Dave Peterson" wrote: You can change it, but I bet you won't want to. You can change the normal style of a workbook by: format|style|choose normal from the dropdown click on the modify button and change the format to what you want. First bad thing: Styles are kept with workbooks. So you'll have to do this to any new or existing workbook. Partial good thing: You can create a workbook template named book.xlt and store it in your XLStart folder. If you change the normal style for this template file, then any new workbook that you start by clicking the New icon on the standard toolbar will inherit this style. Second bad thing (and why I bet you won't do it): Dates are numbers. If you change the normal style to (say) two decimal, then type a date, you'll see the trouble. (Interesting, (well, to me anyway), typing a time doesn't cause the same trouble.) Andrew wrote: Is it possible to change the default number format in Excel? -- Dave Peterson -- Dave Peterson |
Is it possible to change the default number format in Excel?
Styles live in workbooks, so I'm not sure what you could have done to change the
default style of every workbook you opened. But if you did change the default style in the default workbook template, then any workbook based on that template would inherit those styles. Stef Gunn wrote: Hi... Your advice - how does that apply to new Excel? Formatstylenormal doesn't exist in this version... For some crazy reason, as of yesterday, every workbook I open auto formats cells to "Accounting" format (those that used to be "General") - Why is this?! This is driving me crazy and costing me a lot of time to manually correct. Can I turn this off?! Thanks to help you can offer! "Dave Peterson" wrote: You can change it, but I bet you won't want to. You can change the normal style of a workbook by: format|style|choose normal from the dropdown click on the modify button and change the format to what you want. First bad thing: Styles are kept with workbooks. So you'll have to do this to any new or existing workbook. Partial good thing: You can create a workbook template named book.xlt and store it in your XLStart folder. If you change the normal style for this template file, then any new workbook that you start by clicking the New icon on the standard toolbar will inherit this style. Second bad thing (and why I bet you won't do it): Dates are numbers. If you change the normal style to (say) two decimal, then type a date, you'll see the trouble. (Interesting, (well, to me anyway), typing a time doesn't cause the same trouble.) Andrew wrote: Is it possible to change the default number format in Excel? -- Dave Peterson -- Dave Peterson |
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