OL98: Postal Codes Import Incorrectly from Excel WorkbookID: Q181247
|
When you use the Microsoft Outlook Import and Export Wizard to import a Microsoft Excel file that contains postal codes, the postal codes import either with three decimal places or not at all.
You did not format all of the Microsoft Excel zip code cells as "Zip Code + 4." By default, Excel uses the General format for numbers. This format does not import properly into Outlook when you use the Excel converter in the Outlook Import and Export Wizard. If you use a mix of "Zip Code" and "Zip Code + 4" cell formats in the same worksheet, the numbers may not import properly. If you use five-plus-four digit postal codes formatted as "Zip Code", they may not import properly.
You can work around this problem two ways.
When you create an Excel worksheet that contains postal code numbers in the
five-digit format (12345) or in the five-plus-four-digit format (12345-
1234), the postal code numbers do not import properly into Outlook. If the
cell format is General, the five-digit numbers import with three decimal
places. For example, the postal code 123345 imports into Outlook as
12345.000 and the five-plus-four-digit numbers do not import at all. For
example, Outlook imports the postal code of 12345-1234 as a blank field.
If you format the cells as "Zip Code + 4," the data imports properly into
Outlook.
For more information about exchanging Excel information with Outlook, please see the following article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
Q180315 OL98: Importing from Microsoft Excel Requires Named RangeFor more information about Field Mapping in Outlook 98, please see the following article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
Q182728 OL98: Field Mapping for Importing Not Available
Additional query words: zip zipcode
Keywords : IntpImEx
Version : WINDOWS:98
Platform : WINDOWS
Issue type : kbprb
Last Reviewed: August 12, 1999