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I am trying to make a CSV file from an Excel file. It has English, Korean and Japanese inputs. Right now it's saved as file.xlsx.

But when I try to save-as CSV through Excel as file.csv, all the Korean and Japanese inputs turn into question marks (???????)

I tried importing into Google Spreadsheets and exporting out as csv from there (from reading some other solutions) but it still turns into question marks.

I tried building a CSV file from scratch and just copying/pasting values from the Excel file into the CSV, but after I save it as CSV, the characters always crack.

Does anybody know how to work-around this? Thank you

5 Answers 5

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I don't know that there IS an answer for this. CSV has no encoding, so it gets lost when you save in that format.

I tried, as a test, saving Chinese characters as a Unicode Text file, and believe it or not, that worked. So you may be able to do that, and simply change the filename to CSV. Assuming for some reason you NEED the filename to be CSV.

EDIT: I just ran addional testing on this. I was able to reimport the TXT file with either TXT or CSV extension, and the characters stayed just fine. So I think Unicode text is your answer.

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    IT WORKED!!!! you are awesome (basically saved xlsx as Unicode text and then just switched file extension from .txt to .csv in Windows Explorer)
    – Terry Bu
    Jun 6, 2014 at 20:44
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    Eggsellent! Glad it worked. Hopefully this answer will stick around a while, because I'm sure someone's gonna run into this again.
    – durbnpoisn
    Jun 6, 2014 at 20:50
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Simply opening a CSV file in Excel only works when default assumptions hold. You may be writing the CSV correctly but not validating it properly.

It is more reliable to open a blank worksheet and then use Data Import. The encoding of the CSV file is one of the parameters you can specify.

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  • This goes along with my answer. When you save the CSV out of Excel, there is no option to encode it. Even the data import won't recover the fact that the encoding got dropped. (I tried that too)
    – durbnpoisn
    Jun 6, 2014 at 20:49
  • On the save dialog, next to save button there is a tools menu, web options, encoding. Sadly to say this doesn't solve my issue with encoding though.
    – thanos.a
    May 6, 2016 at 8:35
  • This works, new workbook > data > from text/csv > select file > import > load
    – user10212105
    Feb 7, 2023 at 4:43
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To fully retain the characters while saving it on a CSV format and to somehow be able to import/re-use the data in the future.

You can follow these steps.

  1. In Microsoft Excel, open the *.xlsx file.
  2. Select Menu | Save As.
  3. Enter any name for your file.
  4. Under "Save as type," select Unicode Text.
  5. Click Save.
  6. Open your saved file in Microsoft Notepad.
  7. Replace all tab characters with commas (",").
    • Select a tab character (select and copy the space between two column headers)
    • Open the "Find and Replace" window (Press Ctrl+H) and replace all tab characters with comma .
  8. Click Save As.
  9. Name the file, and change the Encoding: to UTF-8.
  10. Change the file extension from .txt to .csv.
  11. Click Save.
  12. Open the .csv file in Excel to view your data.
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Had the same issue. the below article shows the workaround in details: https://help.salesforce.com/articleView?id=000003837&type=1

However, i decided to go with LibreOffice Calc, as it requires less steps to achieve the desired outcome. While exporting, you get to select charecter set, field delimiter and text decimeter.

For all other tasks, i prefer Excel.

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  1. Download and install Unicode CSV Addin for excel.
  2. Save the csv from the new "Unicode CSV" menu as shown in picture below.

enter image description here

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