Saving to CSV in Excel loses regional date format

送分小仙女□ 提交于 2019-11-28 04:14:52

问题


I have a .xls I need to convert to .csv

The file contains some date columns. The format on the date is "*14/03/2001" which, according to Excel means the date responds to regional date and time settings specified for the OS.

Opening in Excel you see:

20/01/2013
01/05/2013

Save as... CSV

Open in notepad:

01/20/2013
05/01/2013

I have temporarily fixed by setting date formats to "14/03/2001" (no *) but even some other custom formats with no *, like "d/mm/yyyy h:mm" get mangled when saved to CSV.


回答1:


Although keeping this in mind http://xkcd.com/1179/

In the end I decided to use the format YYYYMMDD in all CSV files, which doesn't convert to date in Excel, but can be read by all our applications correctly.




回答2:


You can save your desired date format from Excel to .csv by following this procedure, hopefully an excel guru can refine further and reduce the number of steps:

  1. Create a new column DATE_TMP and set it equal to the =TEXT( oldcolumn, "date-format-arg" ) formula.

For example, in your example if your dates were in column A the value in row 1 for this new column would be:

=TEXT( A1, "dd/mm/yyyy" )

  1. Insert a blank column DATE_NEW next to your existing date column.

  2. Paste the contents of DATE_TMP into DATE_NEW using the "paste as value" option.

  3. Remove DATE_TMP and your existing date column, rename DATE_NEW to your old date column.

  4. Save as csv.




回答3:


Change the date and time settings for your computer in the "short date" format under calendar settings. This will change the format for everything yyyy-mm-dd or however you want it to display; but remember it will look like that even for files saved on your computer.

At least it works.




回答4:


You need to do a lot more work than 1. click export 2. Open file.

I think that when the Excel CSV documentation talks about OS and regional settings being interpreted, that means that Excel will do that when it opens the file (which is in their "special" csv format). See this article, "Excel formatting and features are not transferred to other file formats"

Also, Excel is actually storing a number, and converting to a date string only for display. When it exports to CSV, it is converting it to a different date string. If you want that date string to be non-default, you will need to convert your Excel cells to strings before performing your export.

Alternately, you could convert your dates to the number value that Excel is saving. Since that is a time code, it actually will obey OS and regional settings, assuming you import it properly. Notepad will only show you the 10-digit number, though.




回答5:


If you use a Custom format, rather than one of the pre-selected Date formats, the export to CSV will keep your selected format. Otherwise it defaults back to the US format




回答6:


Place an apostrophe in front of the date and it should export in the correct format. Just found it out for myself, I found this thread searching for an answer.




回答7:


A not so scalable fix that I used for this is to copy the data to a plain text editor, convert the cells to text and then copy the data back to the spreadsheet.




回答8:


Change the date range to "General" format and save the workbook once, and change them back to date format (eg, numberformat = "d/m/yyyy") before save & close the book. savechanges parameter is true.



来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/14762834/saving-to-csv-in-excel-loses-regional-date-format

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