ID: Q140755
The information in this article applies to:
When you copy multicolumn text from Word and paste it into Microsoft Excel, the text appears in one column in Microsoft Excel.
If you click Paste Special to paste the text in Microsoft Excel, the text still appears in one column, no matter which format type you select.
Columns are controlled by section-level formatting. If the last paragraph mark in the document or if the section break following the columns is not copied with the rest of the selection, the section formatting, and thus the column formatting, is lost.
NOTE: The methods below let you move the information in two columns to Microsoft Excel, where the information will appear the way it does in Word. However, none of the methods below actually places information in a second cell.
If the document has no other text that you want to copy to Microsoft Excel, follow these steps:
1. On the Edit menu, click Select All to select the entire document
(including column formatting information).
2. On the Edit menu, click Copy.
3. Switch to Microsoft Excel and click Paste Special on the Edit menu.
4. Choose either Microsoft Word Document Object or Picture. Click OK.
Convert the columns to a picture, and paste the picture into Microsoft Excel:
1. Highlight the multicolumn text.
2. Click the Copy button.
3. Click the New Document button.
4. In the new document, click Paste Special on the Edit menu.
5. Click Picture. Click OK.
6. Select the picture, then click the Copy button.
7. Switch to Microsoft Excel. On the Edit menu, click Paste Special.
8. Click Picture. Click OK.
Additional query words: xl
Keywords : kbinterop winword macword word6 word7 word95
Version : WINDOWS:6.0,6.0a,6.0c,7.0,7.0a,97;MACINTOSH:6.0,6.0.1,6.0.1a,98
Platform : MACINTOSH WINDOWS
Issue type : kbbug kbhowto
Last Reviewed: February 4, 1998