ACC2000: #Num Appears in Linked Microsoft Excel SpreadsheetID: Q208414
|
When you link to a Microsoft Excel spreadsheet from a Microsoft Access database, and the fields in the spreadsheet contain both numbers and text, the fields that contain text appear as #Num! in the linked table in Microsoft Access.
Access assigns the data type for each field based on data contained within the first eight rows it links. For example, if a field that contains mostly text values has a number in the first eight rows, Microsoft Access assigns the Number data type, and then cannot link the rest of the records. Any format that you apply to the fields in Microsoft Excel will be ignored by Microsoft Access when the spreadsheet is linked. NOTE: When you import rather than link an Excel spreadsheet, the Text data type has a priority within the import algorithm. For example, if the predominant data type based on a sampling of data is numeric, but there is at least one text value within that sample, Access will import the entire field as Text.
Before you link to the Excel spreadsheet from Access, make sure that the
spreadsheet has the same type of data in each field (column) and the same
fields in every row.
-or-
Use the following procedure to format the cells in the spreadsheet so that
they will appear correctly in Access.
Sub Addspace()
For Each cell in Selection
cell.value = " " & cell.Value
cell.value = Right(cell.Value, Len(cell.Value) - 1)
Next
End sub
CAUTION: Following the steps in this example will modify the sample
database Northwind.mdb. You may want to back up the Northwind.mdb file
and perform these steps on a copy of the database.
A1: 12345
A2: 12345
A3: 12345
A4: 12345
A5: 12345A
For more information about linking data, click Microsoft Access Help on the
Help menu, type "Link data from a spreadsheet" in the Office Assistant or the Answer Wizard,
and then click Search to view the topic.
Additional query words: datatype missmatch prb
Keywords : kbinterop kbdta
Version : WINDOWS:2000
Platform : WINDOWS
Issue type : kbprb
Last Reviewed: May 27, 1999