Why does my text get displayed as quot;####quot; in spite of the fact that it is not
a formula cell? I have tried to resize the cell, but nothing seems to be
working.
If its text then I think you have too much text in the cell. I believe the
limit is 256 characters
quot;Kimberly Noronhaquot; wrote:
gt; Why does my text get displayed as quot;####quot; in spite of the fact that it is not
gt; a formula cell? I have tried to resize the cell, but nothing seems to be
gt; working.
It could mean a couple of things.
1. The columnwidth is too narrow to show the number.
2. You have a date/time in that cell and it's negative
3. You have a lot of text in the cell, the cell is formatted as Text.
To fix #1: Widen the column or change the font size of that cell
To fix #2: Don't use negative dates.
Don't use negative times/dates. But if you have to, change
Tools|options|Calculation Tab|and check 1904 date system
(but this can cause trouble--watch what happens to your dates
and watch what happens when you copy|paste dates to a different
workbook that doesn't use this setting
To fix #3: Format the cell as general.
Kimberly Noronha wrote:
gt;
gt; Why does my text get displayed as quot;####quot; in spite of the fact that it is not
gt; a formula cell? I have tried to resize the cell, but nothing seems to be
gt; working.
--
Dave Peterson
This is prettier:
It could mean a few things.
1. The columnwidth is too narrow to show the number.
Widen the column or change the font size of that cell. Or change the
numberformat to General.
2. You have a date/time in that cell and it's negative
Don't use negative dates. If excel was helping you, it may have
changed the format to a date. Change it back to General (or some
other number format).
If you need to see negative date/times:
Tools|options|Calculation Tab|and check 1904 date system
(but this can cause trouble--watch what happens to your dates
and watch what happens when you copy|paste dates to a different
workbook that doesn't use this setting)
3. You have a lot of text in the cell, the cell is formatted as Text.
Format the cell as general.
4. You really have ###'s in that cell.
Clean up that cell.
5. You have # in a cell, but it's format is set to Fill.
Change the format
(format|cells|alignment tab|horizontal box, change it to General.
Kimberly Noronha wrote:
gt;
gt; Why does my text get displayed as quot;####quot; in spite of the fact that it is not
gt; a formula cell? I have tried to resize the cell, but nothing seems to be
gt; working.
--
Dave Peterson
- Jun 22 Fri 2007 20:38
# in cell
close
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