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I have an integer field that I'd like to convert to alpha.
Using EDIT(number) I get leading zeros.
Using FTOA(number, '(format)', outfield) I get thousand separators.
I'd like a string that has neither. I want to create a comma or tab delimited file where my numeric data is enclosed in double quotation marks (i.e. "5737299219238872") so that Excel does not assume the column is numeric.
Thank you.
Francis
Give me code, or give me retirement. In FOCUS since 1991
Production: WF 7.7.05M, Dev Studio, BID, MRE, WebSphere, DB2 / Test: WF 8.1.05M, App Studio, BI Portal, Report Caster, jQuery, HighCharts, Apache Tomcat, MS SQL Server
Unfortunately you cannot trick Excel into thinking a field is text simply by putting quotes around a number. This has been a know defect in Excel for years, and unless they have corrected it in the very latest version, numbers are always treated as numbers, even if there are quotes around them.
The only way to change that behavior is to put a non-numeric character in the string. I have used leading underscores successfully, although your end-users might be a little confused by it unless you explain it or add a note in the trailer.
I decided to not bother with any numeric column conversion.
If the file is saved as tab delimited and suffixed with .tab, and then opened in Excel, Excel prompts you with its' Text Import Wizard, where you specify that the data is delimited by tabs and where for each column you can set the data format - I chose Text and the file was opened with no problems at all.
Francis
Give me code, or give me retirement. In FOCUS since 1991
Production: WF 7.7.05M, Dev Studio, BID, MRE, WebSphere, DB2 / Test: WF 8.1.05M, App Studio, BI Portal, Report Caster, jQuery, HighCharts, Apache Tomcat, MS SQL Server