This is a guide on how to manually convert a CSV to Excel XP, Excel 2003, Excel 2007, Excel 2010 and Excel 2013. You can convert files automatically and schedule conversion of CSV to XLS using our software tool FileSculptor.
This tutorial covers Excel XP. If you use a different version of Excel click on the version below:
Excel XP
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Open the CSV File
Select the option to open a file in Excel through the menu File – Open…, and choose the option Text Files that includes CSV files. The CSV file has an icon indicating that it is supported by Excel. This is the fastest method and the default action when you double click on a CSV file, although it does not work with all CSV files.
Open file in Excel XP
Open file of CSV type in Excel XP
Depending on the CSV file contents and the regional settings configuration of Windows, the data in the CSV file may not show correctly in Excel. The most common errors are:
– data is shown on a single column
– date columns are shown as text
– text columns containing only numbers are treated as number with leading zero removed
– currency values treated as text
Download the file advanced-csv-sample.csv to reproduce some of these errors.
CSV data incorrectly formatted: Order ID without leading zeroes and Order Date and EUR Amount as text instead of date and number
Open the CSV file in Notepad and notice that the leading zeroes in the Order ID field were removed by Excel. The Order Date value in the date format YYYYMMDD (year, month and day) wasn’t automatically recognized. Neither was the Amount in EUR value because this computer is configured to use period as decimal symbol. Both values appear as text instead of their correct formats, limiting the use of the data.
Use the Text Import Tool described below to mitigate these errors.
Import CSV File using Excel Text Import Tool
Click on the menu Data – Import External Data – Import Data…, as shown below:
Get External Data From Text File on Data menu
Navigate to the folder where the file is located and select the CSV file to import with the Select Data Source dialog and click Open button:
Use Select Data Source dialog to open CSV file
Define the import settings (step 1 of 3). The contents of the file are shown, notice the use of comma to separate values and double quotes enclosing the EUR amount value because it contains a comma. Keep the data type as delimited to configure the delimiter in the next screen. You may need to change the File Origin to Windows (ANSI) depending on the file contents. Change it only if you notice weird characters in the processed data.
Configure CSV file as delimited
Define the import settings (step 2 of 3). Select the right separator, comma in this example, to show the values into columns.
Configure delimiter of CSV file with data preview
Define the import settings (step 3 of 3 – part 1). Review and if necessary change the data format of each column. As the column Order Id contains only numbers Excel treats it as number and removes the leading zeros. If we change the column data format to text Excel will not change its contents.
Configure data format for text value in CSV file
Define the import settings (step 3 of 3 – part 2). Excel recognizes some date formats. If it does not, change the data format manually defining one of the supported formats. In the example we change the column Order Date to the right format. YMD means that the date is in the format Year – Month – Day.
Configure data format for date value in CSV file
Define the import settings (step 3 of 3 – part 3). Sometimes even number columns need to be configured. In this example the Amount EUR column is using a different decimal symbol than the system’s configuration. To configure these cases, keep the data format as General, click the Advanced button and configure the decimal and thousands separators used in the column.
Configure data format for amount value in CSV file
Define the destination of the imported data. After you finish configuring the wizard, Excel opens the Import Data dialog asking where to put the results. Select the proper location but do not click the OK button yet, as there is still one step left.
Import Data dialog to define where to put the imported data
Click the Properties button to define the properties of the import process, so it can be used more times without the need of re-configuring everything:
Query Definition
Keep it checked to save the import configuration (delimiter, column formats)
Refresh Control
The refresh control defines if the sheet will be automatically refreshed, if the file name changes and if the sheet should be refreshed and emptied when opened or closed. Uncheck the “Prompt for file name on refresh” option if the file always have the same name and location.
Data formatting and layout
Normally nothing to change
If the number of rows in the data range changes upon refresh
This configuration depends on the source file, if it always contain all data use the overwrite option, the insert options will move existing data down and load the new data above it
Fill down formulas in columns adjacent to data
Check this option if the sheet contains columns with formulas alongside imported data. Its recommended to use another sheet to process the imported data.
External Data Range Properties dialog to define where to put the imported data
Click OK to close the External Data Range Properties dialog and click OK to close the Import Data dialog and import the data on the selected destination. If the data is formatted correctly, save the sheet.
CSV file imported with data formatted correctly
To refresh the data, importing a new file with the same format, click on any of the cells that holds data of a previous import. Then click on the menu Data – Refresh Data.
Refresh All function to import CSV file again and refresh data