There are things that Word can do in a table that Excel can't do. And there
are things that Excel can do that Word can't do. So when we copy a table
from Word to Excel, Excel does its best and interprets what you paste in its
own way. It is particularly unforgiving if you had more than one paragraph
in a cell in Word, or if you used New Line breaks in a cell in a Word table.
Excel will interpret each paragraph or each line to be a separate cell. And
it will merge adjacent cells to try to replicate Word's formatting to some
extent.
However, there may be some ways to format your Excel spreadsheet the way you
want it. Post a question to one of the Microsoft Excel newsgroups. Let them
know what you are seeing in Excel and what you would like to see.
Hope this helps.
Shauna Kelly. Microsoft MVP.
http://www.shaunakelly.com/word
"Angela" <Ang...@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:7EFDF68B-1A50-4FE5...@microsoft.com...
> I've got a table I've created in Word 2002 and I'd like to export it or
> paste
> it into an Excel spreadsheet. When I paste the copied table into Excel
> the
> formatting displayed is incorrect. In Word for example I've got a a row
> that
> contains 15 line in this one record. When I paste it into Excel, Excel
> sees
> those lines individually and creates a row for each. Is there a simple
> way
> to transfer this table to Excel and still maintain all the formatting?
> Any
> help you could offer would be greatly appreciated. Thank you in advance.
> --
> Angela
> I am having the exact same problem. I need to paste
> a Word table into Excel, where the cells contain paragraph markers, and I
> need the cells in Excel to look exactly like they do in Word.
>
Basically, you need to use Find/Replace in Word to change the paragraph
marks into something else (some character you don't otherwise use in your
text).
Now you can copy and paste into Excel, retaining the same cell
layout/structure.
In Excel, Find/Replace the special character with the invisible character
you get when you press Ctrl+J (a newline character in Excel)
Cindy Meister
INTER-Solutions, Switzerland
http://homepage.swissonline.ch/cindymeister (last update Jun 8 2004)
http://www.word.mvps.org
This reply is posted in the Newsgroup; please post any follow question or
reply in the newsgroup and not by e-mail :-)
Okay, I now realize you use Ctrl+J to insert into the "Replace with" box the
character entered with Alt+Enter in the sheet itself.
--
Suzanne S. Barnhill
Microsoft MVP (Word)
Words into Type
Fairhope, Alabama USA
Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org
Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so
all may benefit.
"Cindy M -WordMVP-" <C.Mei...@hispeed.ch> wrote in message
news:VA.0000b029.007bd80a@speedy...