M
M.Hall
I have always marked the option to use fixed decimal, 2
places because I found it easier since I work with mostly
monetary values. In the past, if you wanted zero cents,
you could enter the whole number then the decimal only
and it placed the fixed decimal with the two zeros after
it (keystroke 20. returned 20.00). With Excel 2003
(which I just started using) I have found that when you
try that same thing, it floats the decimal over
(keystroke 20. returns .20) however if you add one zero
after the decimal it is correct (keystroke 20.0 returns
20.00) which hardly makes it a short cut.
Does anyone know if I am missing a setting, or did the
new version just eliminate this shortcut that I liked?
Thanks!
places because I found it easier since I work with mostly
monetary values. In the past, if you wanted zero cents,
you could enter the whole number then the decimal only
and it placed the fixed decimal with the two zeros after
it (keystroke 20. returned 20.00). With Excel 2003
(which I just started using) I have found that when you
try that same thing, it floats the decimal over
(keystroke 20. returns .20) however if you add one zero
after the decimal it is correct (keystroke 20.0 returns
20.00) which hardly makes it a short cut.
Does anyone know if I am missing a setting, or did the
new version just eliminate this shortcut that I liked?
Thanks!