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On Feb 17, 2015, at 6:16 AM, Brian Barker <b.m.barker@btinternet.com> wrote:

At 11:58 17/02/2015 +0100, Uwe Brauer wrote:
I periodically receive excel files (generated by Office 2010 I think, but saved in the old 
binary format). Some of these columns cause me problems, since they seem to contain spaces and 
even newlines. I could correct that manually, but since the file contains hundred of lines this 
is cumbersome. So the question is whether there exist any formatting function which could 
resolve the issue.

I attach an (shorted) example of the problem and would appreciate any help.

Your rogue cells (which I have examined by magic, despite your attached file not making it 
through to the list!), appear to contain the data (a digit, but as text), a line break, five tab 
characters, a space, and a non-breaking space - in that order.

o Go to Edit | Find & Replace (or Ctrl+F).
o Click More Options and ensure "Regular expressions" is ticked.

o You can remove the line breaks by replacing \n with nothing.

o You can remove the tab characters by replacing \t with nothing.

o You can remove non-breaking spaces by pasting one into the "Search for" field and replacing 
with nothing. To do this, one way is to select an unused cell, put the cursor into the Input 
Line, use Insert | Formatting Mark > | Non-breaking space, press Enter or click the green tick 
mark, copy the cell, and paste into the "Search for" field.

o You can remove spaces by replacing a space character with nothing. If you want to do this over 
multiple cells and want avoid removing significant spaces in other cells, you could do this by 
replacing " $" (space-dollar, but without the quotes), which removes trailing spaces. You would 
need to do this after removing the non-breaking spaces, of course.


          I don’t know about the specific file you tried to send, but I recently fixed a similar 
problem by turning off “Wrap text automatically” (under Format -> Cells -> Allignment).  You might 
check this, especially if you want to keep blank spaces.  


          Hope this helps.  

          Spencer 


I trust this helps.

Brian Barker


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