Question

I wish to write to a CSV file some data. One of the column that I input the information is in the form of an integer with leading zeros, example: 0000000013.

For some reason, excel 'converts' it to 13, and I must have it with 10 digits (0000000013). Can anyone tell how this can be circumvented?

String value = "0000000013"; //I tried String.format("%8d", 13) doesn't work
printWriter.println(value);

Thanks!!!

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Solution

Add a single quote, ', at the start of the line. This informs Excel to not treat the value as a number.

OTHER TIPS

Append tab to the number

ex: "\t"+"01234"

Even better way is to print your number as ="0000000013"

String value = "0000000013"; 
printWriter.println("=\"" + value + "\"");

When one opens a CSV file in excel 2007, it opens the Text Import Wizard. In step 3, you can specify the column data format of the column to be 'Text'. Just select the appropriate column header in the 'Data preview' pane. Then select the 'Text' radio button in the 'Column data format' pane.

Try:

String.format("%08d", 13)

Note the 0 in the format string, that tells Java to prefix the number with zeroes up to the length indicated in the field (8 in this case).

You should use:

String.format("%08d", 13);
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