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Teri

Format of Cell Entry
 
Excel 2000 - when entering numbers in a cell that are beyond 12 digits it
displays as follows: 123456789012+E13 - why.
--
Teri

Bondi

Format of Cell Entry
 
Hi Teri,

I think that might be because you have your cell format set to Generel
and not Number
Right clik the cell and choose Format

Regards,
Bondi


Teri

Format of Cell Entry
 
We did figure that out however we don't understand why it does it in the
first place. If you put symbols (-) or spaces or commas between number it
works okay. Any reason why the error after 12 digits?

Also another problem - when changing to Number format - the last digit typed
in changes to a 0 automatically when pressing Enter. 12345678901234567
(entered) changes to 12345678901234560. Any explanation?
--
Teri


"Bondi" wrote:

Hi Teri,

I think that might be because you have your cell format set to Generel
and not Number
Right clik the cell and choose Format

Regards,
Bondi



Bondi

Format of Cell Entry
 
Hi Teri,
for the first one:

http://www.infopackets.com/channels/...s_ms_excel.htm

Regards,
Bondi


Gord Dibben

Format of Cell Entry
 
Teri

Excel recognizes 15 digits of precision. Any thing after that is changed to a
0.

If you need a 15 digit number like a stock number or credit card number,
precede the number with an apostrophe.

This will return a text string, not a caculable number.


Gord Dibben MS Excel MVP

On Thu, 20 Apr 2006 13:37:02 -0700, Teri (nospam) wrote:

We did figure that out however we don't understand why it does it in the
first place. If you put symbols (-) or spaces or commas between number it
works okay. Any reason why the error after 12 digits?

Also another problem - when changing to Number format - the last digit typed
in changes to a 0 automatically when pressing Enter. 12345678901234567
(entered) changes to 12345678901234560. Any explanation?



BrianH

Format of Cell Entry
 
A few things he

If you put in symbols, spaces, commas, etc, Excel will see the entry as
text, and will faithfully reproduce the full text entry - not sure how many
characters you can have in a text string these days - a couple of thousand, I
think, but I'm not sure. But as text, you won't be able to do any numerical
calculations with it.

The behaviour you describe is not an error, it's just the way Excel is
programmed to work - numbers with 12 or more digits will be displayed in
scientific notation if the number format is "General". The point is of
course that in any real world application the measurement errors and
uncertainties in the data are such that only the first 2 or 3 or 4 digits are
meaningful, and that's what's displayed in scientific notation. If you think
the 11th, 12th and 13th digits are real, you're kidding yourself.

Re the truncation of the last digits, you did well to get 16 remaining - my
version only gives 15. Whatever, that's the internal calculation accuracy of
Excel, to 15 significant figures. That's why you'll sometimes find that
calculations that should yield zero actually result in values of the form
x.xxE-yy, where yy is 10 or more - i.e., very small non-zero values. But as
above, if you think anything more than the first few digits mean anything in
any real world application, you're kidding yourself, so 15 significant
figures is far more accurate than most people need. And Excel is geared to
the needs of most people, not a few technical specialists. So if you really
need more than 15 significant figures, Excel is not the tool for you, and
you'll also need to ensure that the processor chip in your computer can
actually handle your required level of precision - the applications you run
can't do better than your computer hardware!

Cheers

BrianH

"Teri" wrote:

We did figure that out however we don't understand why it does it in the
first place. If you put symbols (-) or spaces or commas between number it
works okay. Any reason why the error after 12 digits?

Also another problem - when changing to Number format - the last digit typed
in changes to a 0 automatically when pressing Enter. 12345678901234567
(entered) changes to 12345678901234560. Any explanation?
--
Teri


"Bondi" wrote:

Hi Teri,

I think that might be because you have your cell format set to Generel
and not Number
Right clik the cell and choose Format

Regards,
Bondi




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