ID: Q181582
The information in this article applies to:
If you save a Microsoft Excel 97 workbook, containing a named range, in a dBase (*.dbf) file format and then import the dBase file into Microsoft Outlook 98, some of the data may be truncated.
If any cells in your named range are narrower than the width of the data, that data is truncated because it does not fit within the visual selection of the named range. When you save the Microsoft Excel file in a dBase format, the data in those narrow cells is truncated.
You can resolve this problem two ways.
When you define a named range in a Microsoft Excel worksheet, the data in the last column may appear outside of the selected area if the width of the column is narrower than its data. If you save the workbook as a dBase file and then import it into Outlook, the data that did not fit within the last column is truncated. If you use the same procedure, but save the file as an Microsoft Excel workbook file, the imported data is not truncated.
The following steps demonstrate this problem:
1. In a new Microsoft Excel workbook, type the following information into
Sheet1:
A B C
+---------+--------+------------+
1 |FirstName|LastName|HomePhone |
|---------|--------|------------|
2 |John |Doe |111-222-3333|
|---------|--------|------------|
3 |Jane |Doe |444-555-6666|
+---------+--------+------------+
2. Make sure that the width of column C is not wide enough to
accommodate the telephone numbers. On most computers, the default width
of column C is too narrow and the telephone numbers continue into
column D.
3. Drag to select the range of cells A1:C3. Note that the telephone
number digits that do not fit within column C appear outside of
the visible selected range.
4. On the Insert menu, click Name and then click Define.
5. In "Names in workbook," type Contacts and click OK.
6. On the File menu, click Save As.
7. In File name, type Contacts.
8. In the "Save as type" list, click "DBF4(dBASE IV)(*.dbf)" and click
Save.
1. Start Outlook.
2. On the File menu, click Import And Export.
3. In the "Choose an action to perform" list, click to select "Import from
another program or file" and click Next.
4. In the "Select file type to import from" list, click to select dBase
and click Next.
5. In File To Import, type the path and file name of your
Contacts.dbf file or click Browse to navigate to the file you saved
in Microsoft Excel and click Next.
6. In the "Select destination folder" list, click your Contacts folder and
click Next.
7. In "The following actions will be performed" list, click to select
"Import 'Contacts.dbf' into the 'Contacts' folder." Click Finish.
When you view John and Jane Doe in your Outlook Contacts folder, the Home
telephone number is truncated.
For more information on data lost saving in a dBase format from Microsoft Excel, please see the following article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
Article-ID: Q46228
Title : XL5: Data Lost When File Saved in .DBF File Format
For more information on Importing from Microsoft Excel into Outlook, please
see the following article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
Article-ID: Q180315
Title : OL98: Importing from Microsoft Excel Requires Named Range
Keywords : kbinterop IntpODBC
Version : WINDOWS:97 98
Platform : WINDOWS
Issue type : kbprb
Last Reviewed: February 12, 1999