Annoying automatic date-formatting on import... how to remove it?

J

Jose McNach

I'm using Excel to import tab-delimited text files containing a large
number of rows and columns. The data are mostly numerical, but some are
text.

Somehow, Excel insists in renaming certain values as if they were
dates. For instance I have a column with gene names, some of which with
names like "SEP10" or "DEC7"... and Excel sees that as a date and turns
it into "10-Sep"... In other cases renames entries such as "3-24" as
"24-Mar"...

How can I turn off EVERY automatic "intelligent" feature in Excel so
that it just takes what I feed it? I have gone through every menu
turning off automatic formatting and everything I could see... but that
behaviour remains.

I'm sure there must be a way to import these data so that numbers are
treated like numbers, and everything else as text... but I can't find
how, and I am finding it very frustrating.

Any ideas?

Thanks!

Jose
 
D

David Biddulph

Jose McNach said:
I'm using Excel to import tab-delimited text files containing a large
number of rows and columns. The data are mostly numerical, but some are
text.

Somehow, Excel insists in renaming certain values as if they were
dates. For instance I have a column with gene names, some of which with
names like "SEP10" or "DEC7"... and Excel sees that as a date and turns
it into "10-Sep"... In other cases renames entries such as "3-24" as
"24-Mar"...

How can I turn off EVERY automatic "intelligent" feature in Excel so
that it just takes what I feed it? I have gone through every menu
turning off automatic formatting and everything I could see... but that
behaviour remains.

I'm sure there must be a way to import these data so that numbers are
treated like numbers, and everything else as text... but I can't find
how, and I am finding it very frustrating.

When you open the text file, the wizard should give you the opportunity to
select the format for each column.
 
J

Jose McNach

David said:
When you open the text file, the wizard should give you the opportunity to
select the format for each column.

That's if I open it from Excel, and if the extension name hasn't been
set to open with Excel (a nice little shortcut, adding different
extension names depending on what kind of data I have...). So, yes,
there are ways to get around the issue... but none very satisfactory.
I'm all for having the possibility for software guessing and helping
our formats etc... but there should always be an option to NOT do
anything but take the data as it is.

Thanks for your reply, David.

Jose
 

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