OK. I give. Why can't I use the "@" (at sign) in a text cell?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Guest
  • Start date Start date
G

Guest

I looked all through doc and searched online and cannot find an answer to
this question. I need some experienced help.

I have a cell (a whole column) defined as Text. If the text I type in the
cell includes an at sign (@) the text field displays as ##### (railroad
tracks) most of the time. I have verified the format is text (and word wrap
is on) and it doesn't matter if I start the text with an apostrophe or not.
It also appears to be OK in some text cells but not others. What is the deal?

Thanks.
 
Oops. Apparently it has nothing to do with the "@" sign. Now I'm guessing
that Excel seems to have a limit on the number of characters you can have in
a cell (I'm guessing 255). However, I have searched the doc several times and
cannot find that documented anywhere. (I don't seem to recall this from any
of the miriad of Excel classes I have been to either.)

Any suggestions as to where that is documented and is there a way to expand
this value?
 
Format the cells as GENERAL.

From Excel Help: (search Help for limits and specifications)

Length of cell contents (text)... 32,767 characters. Only 1,024 display in a
cell; all 32,767 display in the formula bar.

Biff
 
Excel has a problem with cells formatted as text where the value is between 255
and 1024 characters long. Formatting as General will fix the display.
 
The format to General *is* the solution, but ... I think it's because of the
"Text Bug".

There seems to be a quirk (bug), where in a Text formatted cell of more then
approximately 256 characters, you'll get the ###'s.

Stranger yet, if you keep typing, the true text *returns* when the character
count exceeds 1024.

General format works for the "in-between" character counts.
 

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