171
  1. I have excel file with such contents:

    • A1: SomeString

    • A2: 2

    All fields are set to String format.

  2. When I read the file in java using POI, it tells that A2 is in numeric cell format.

  3. The problem is that the value in A2 can be 2 or 2.0 (and I want to be able to distinguish them) so I can't just use .toString().

What can I do to read the value as string?

1
  • 1
    What idiot designed the POI API that this is a question viewed 342k times? Commented Apr 3 at 4:46

25 Answers 25

345

Set cell type to string

I had same problem. I did cell.setCellType(Cell.CELL_TYPE_STRING); before reading the string value, which solved the problem regardless of how the user formatted the cell.

14
  • I use poi-3.8-beta4, and its working as expected! Why don't TS accept this as the answer?
    – swdev
    Commented Sep 10, 2012 at 9:34
  • 68
    Note that the Apache POI javadocs explicitly say not to do this! As they explain, you should use DataFormatter instead
    – Gagravarr
    Commented May 24, 2015 at 11:13
  • 8
    Gagravarr's warning against doing this is right! From the docs: "If what you want to do is get a String value for your numeric cell, stop!. This is not the way to do it. Instead, for fetching the string value of a numeric or boolean or date cell, use DataFormatter instead." poi.apache.org/apidocs/org/apache/poi/ss/usermodel/… I was using this technique myself until I wound up accidentally changing data I didn't intend to change. (Set type to String, read value, set type back to numeric, read again and get a different numeric value!) Commented Jul 31, 2015 at 13:19
  • 1
    @Wil cell.setCellType(Cell.CELL_TYPE_STRING); not works for .xlsx sheet. Any other solution for this?
    – Meenaxi
    Commented Oct 24, 2015 at 6:26
  • 6
    Use DataFormatter. The Javadoc warns us from using the above method.
    – Balu SKT
    Commented Feb 26, 2016 at 13:38
137

DataFormatter

I don't think we had this class back when you asked the question, but today there is an easy answer.

What you want to do is use the DataFormatter class. You pass this a cell, and it does its best to return you a string containing what Excel would show you for that cell. If you pass it a string cell, you'll get the string back. If you pass it a numeric cell with formatting rules applied, it will format the number based on them and give you the string back.

For your case, I'd assume that the numeric cells have an integer formatting rule applied to them. If you ask DataFormatter to format those cells, it'll give you back a string with the integer string in it.

Also, note that lots of people suggest doing cell.setCellType(Cell.CELL_TYPE_STRING), but the Apache POI JavaDocs quite clearly state that you shouldn't do this! Doing the setCellType call will loose formatting, as the javadocs explain the only way to convert to a String with formatting remaining is to use the DataFormatter class.

A simple example of using this class:

DataFormatter dataFormatter = new DataFormatter();
String formattedCellStr = dataFormatter.formatCellValue(cell);
6
  • Thanks @Gagravarr only your answer work for me, <code>cell.setCellType(Cell.CELL_TYPE_STRING);<code> in convert the 2.2 value as 2.2000000000000002, but i want 2.2. it return anything in string format thank Commented Jun 14, 2016 at 11:06
  • dataformatter does not seem to work for Formula cells, it returns a string representation of the formula instead of the value
    – gaurav5430
    Commented Jul 4, 2016 at 10:58
  • 3
    Just one minor note: Please provide short code snippets for such answers, also if those are stated in provided links
    – BAERUS
    Commented Sep 6, 2017 at 9:33
  • @gaurav5430 Yes, it doesnt go well with formulas... According to doc, When passed a null or blank cell, this method will return an empty String (""). Formulas in formula type cells will not be evaluated. Commented Jan 25, 2019 at 7:03
  • This also does not work well with large integers that have a numeric cell type, because DataFormatter internally converts it to a double, then back to a String, so there's the risk of losing precision, and leading/trailing 0s
    – Stik
    Commented Jan 25, 2023 at 13:41
65

The below code worked for me for any type of cell.

InputStream inp =getClass().getResourceAsStream("filename.xls"));
Workbook wb = WorkbookFactory.create(inp);
DataFormatter objDefaultFormat = new DataFormatter();
FormulaEvaluator objFormulaEvaluator = new HSSFFormulaEvaluator((HSSFWorkbook) wb);

Sheet sheet= wb.getSheetAt(0);
Iterator<Row> objIterator = sheet.rowIterator();

while(objIterator.hasNext()){

    Row row = objIterator.next();
    Cell cellValue = row.getCell(0);
    objFormulaEvaluator.evaluate(cellValue); // This will evaluate the cell, And any type of cell will return string value
    String cellValueStr = objDefaultFormat.formatCellValue(cellValue,objFormulaEvaluator);

}
4
  • 9
    Worked just fine! My suggestion would be to change the way the FormulaEvaluator is retrieved. The Workbook class provides a formula evaluator though the getCreationHelper().createFormulaEvaluator() method. This way your code won't be coupled with the HSSFFormulaEvaluator class. Commented Feb 16, 2016 at 17:48
  • 2
    This should be the accepted answer. Thanks @Vinayak Commented Jun 22, 2017 at 17:13
  • Can FormulaEvaluator simply be removed from this solution? Does it serve a purpose? Commented Sep 8, 2017 at 20:23
  • 2
    the call to objFormulaEvaluator.evaluate is not necessary. The return value of that is not being used here. Commented Oct 8, 2018 at 14:24
45

I would recommend the following approach when modifying cell's type is undesirable:

if(cell.getCellType() == Cell.CELL_TYPE_NUMERIC) {
    String str = NumberToTextConverter.toText(cell.getNumericCellValue())
}

NumberToTextConverter can correctly convert double value to a text using Excel's rules without precision loss.

3
  • Really exciting advise! Thank you! It allows getting unconverted values in contrast to setting cellType to String. Commented Jun 19, 2019 at 10:55
  • I am getting 44007 as output for cell value of 25/06/2020. What am I doing wrong?
    – Vinay
    Commented Jun 25, 2020 at 10:12
  • @Vinay for dates use DateUtil. Something like DateUtil.getLocalDateTime(row.getCell(1).getNumericCellValue()).toLocalDate() Commented Sep 9, 2020 at 9:01
21

As already mentioned in the Poi's JavaDocs (https://poi.apache.org/apidocs/org/apache/poi/ss/usermodel/Cell.html#setCellType%28int%29) don't use:

cell.setCellType(Cell.CELL_TYPE_STRING);

but use:

DataFormatter df = new DataFormatter();
String value = df.formatCellValue(cell);

More examples on http://massapi.com/class/da/DataFormatter.html

16

Yes, this works perfectly

recommended:

        DataFormatter dataFormatter = new DataFormatter();
        String value = dataFormatter.formatCellValue(cell);

old:

cell.setCellType(Cell.CELL_TYPE_STRING);

even if you have a problem with retrieving a value from cell having formula, still this works.

2
  • 5
    But you have to be careful using this for double values. For me it turned the value 7.9 into 7.8999956589965...
    – Chris
    Commented Oct 24, 2014 at 11:52
  • 2
    The Apache POI javadocs are very clear that you shouldn't be doing it like that: If what you want to do is get a String value for your numeric cell, stop!. This is not the way to do it. Instead, for fetching the string value of a numeric or boolean or date cell, use DataFormatter instead.
    – Gagravarr
    Commented Feb 26, 2016 at 13:19
5

Try:

new java.text.DecimalFormat("0").format( cell.getNumericCellValue() )

Should format the number correctly.

1
  • As I understand, the asker wants to be able to distinguish between 2 and 2.0. Your solution wouldn't do this. (But still, welcome to Stack Overflow!) Commented Aug 17, 2011 at 19:15
2

You can read numerical cells as String using java.

int type = cell.getCellType();
if(type == 0){
   String value = NumberToTextConverter.toText(cell.getNumericCellValue());
}
else{
   value = String.valueOf(cell.getStringCellValue());
}

Here,

0 => numeric cell

getCellType() => this method use to get type of excel cell.

1

As long as the cell is in text format before the user types in the number, POI will allow you to obtain the value as a string. One key is that if there is a small green triangle in the upper left-hand corner of cell that is formatted as Text, you will be able to retrieve its value as a string (the green triangle appears whenever something that appears to be a number is coerced into a text format). If you have Text formatted cells that contain numbers, but POI will not let you fetch those values as strings, there are a few things you can do to the Spreadsheet data to allow that:

  • Double click on the cell so that the editing cursor is present inside the cell, then click on Enter (which can be done only one cell at a time).
  • Use the Excel 2007 text conversion function (which can be done on multiple cells at once).
  • Cut out the offending values to another location, reformat the spreadsheet cells as text, then repaste the previously cut out values as Unformatted Values back into the proper area.

One final thing that you can do is that if you are using POI to obtain data from an Excel 2007 spreadsheet, you can the Cell class 'getRawValue()' method. This does not care what the format is. It will simply return a string with the raw data.

0

When we read the MS Excel's numeric cell value using Apache POI library, it read it as numeric. But sometime we want it to read as string (e.g. phone numbers, etc.). This is how I did it:

  1. Insert a new column with first cell =CONCATENATE("!",D2). I assume D2 is cell id of your phone-number column. Drag new cell up to end.

  2. Now if you read the cell using POI, it will read the formula instead of calculated value. Now do following:

  3. Add another column

  4. Select complete column created in step 1. and choose Edit->COPY

  5. Go to top cell of column created in step 3. and Select Edit->Paste Special

  6. In the opened window, Select "Values" radio button

  7. Select "OK"

  8. Now read using POI API ... after reading in Java ... just remove the first character i.e. "!"

2
  • Your solution seems to be not usable if one doesn't produce the excel files oneself, is it? (Also, could you put an extract into your answer? It is not that long.) Commented Aug 17, 2011 at 19:13
  • Yes, it can't be used when one isn't producing excel file oneself. Commented Aug 21, 2011 at 9:09
0

I also have had a similar issue on a data set of thousands of numbers and I think that I have found a simple way to solve. I needed to get the apostrophe inserted before a number so that a separate DB import always sees the numbers as text. Before this the number 8 would be imported as 8.0.

Solution:

  • Keep all the formatting as General.
  • Here I am assuming numbers are stored in Column A starting at Row 1.
  • Put in the ' in Column B and copy down as many rows as needed. Nothing appears in the worksheet but clicking on the cell you can see the apostophe in the Formula bar.
  • In Column C: =B1&A1.
  • Select all the Cells in Column C and do a Paste Special into Column D using the Values option.

Hey Presto all the numbers but stored as Text.

0

getStringCellValue returns NumberFormatException if the cell type is numeric. If you don't want to change the cell type to string, you can do this.

String rsdata = "";
try {
    rsdata = cell.getStringValue();
} catch (NumberFormatException ex) {
    rsdata = cell.getNumericValue() + "";
}
0

Many of these answers reference old POI documentation and classes. In the newest POI 3.16, Cell with the int types has been deprecated

Cell.CELL_TYPE_STRING

enter image description here

Instead the CellType enum can be used.

CellType.STRING 

Just be sure to update your pom with the poi dependency as well as the poi-ooxml dependency to the new 3.16 version otherwise you will continue to get exceptions. One advantage with this version is that you can specify the cell type at the time the cell is created eliminating all the extra steps described in previous answers:

titleRowCell = currentReportRow.createCell(currentReportColumnIndex, CellType.STRING);
0

This worked perfect for me.

Double legacyRow = row.getCell(col).getNumericCellValue();
String legacyRowStr = legacyRow.toString();
if(legacyRowStr.contains(".0")){
    legacyRowStr = legacyRowStr.substring(0, legacyRowStr.length()-2);
}
0

I would much rather go the route of the wil's answer or Vinayak Dornala, unfortunately they effected my performance far to much. I went for a HACKY solution of implicit casting:

for (Row row : sheet){
String strValue = (row.getCell(numericColumn)+""); // hack
...

I don't suggest you do this, for my situation it worked because of the nature of how the system worked and I had a reliable file source.

Footnote: numericColumn Is an int which is generated from reading the header of the file processed.

0
public class Excellib {
public String getExceldata(String sheetname,int rownum,int cellnum, boolean isString) {
    String retVal=null;
    try {
        FileInputStream fis=new FileInputStream("E:\\Sample-Automation-Workspace\\SampleTestDataDriven\\Registration.xlsx");
        Workbook wb=WorkbookFactory.create(fis);
        Sheet s=wb.getSheet(sheetname);
        Row r=s.getRow(rownum);
        Cell c=r.getCell(cellnum);
        if(c.getCellType() == Cell.CELL_TYPE_STRING)
        retVal=c.getStringCellValue();
        else {
            retVal = String.valueOf(c.getNumericCellValue());
        }

I Tried This and It worked For me

0

There is a ready-to-use wrapper (some additional optimizations can be applied)

  • it supports numeric and String cells

  • formulas are recognized and handled automatically

  • avoid some boilerplate

     public final class Cell {
    
     private final static DataFormatter FORMATTER = new DataFormatter();
    
     private XSSFCell mCell;
    
     public Cell(@NotNull XSSFCell cell) {
         mCell = cell;
    
         if (isFormula()) {
             XSSFWorkbook book = mCell.getSheet().getWorkbook();
             FormulaEvaluator evaluator = book.getCreationHelper().createFormulaEvaluator();
             mCell = (XSSFCell) evaluator.evaluateInCell(mCell);
         }
     }
    
     /**
      * Get content
      */
     public final int getInt() {
         return (int) getLong();
     }
    
     public final long getLong() {
         return Math.round(getDouble());
     }
    
     public final double getDouble() {
         return mCell.getNumericCellValue();
     }
    
     public final String getString() {
         if (!isString()) {
             return FORMATTER.formatCellValue(mCell);
         }
         return mCell.getStringCellValue();
     }
    
     /**
      * Get properties
      */
     public final boolean isNumber() {
         if (isFormula()) {
             return mCell.getCachedFormulaResultType().equals(CellType.NUMERIC);
         }
         return mCell.getCellType().equals(CellType.NUMERIC);
     }
    
     public final boolean isString() {
         if (isFormula()) {
             return mCell.getCachedFormulaResultType().equals(CellType.STRING);
         }
         return mCell.getCellType().equals(CellType.STRING);
     }
    
     public final boolean isFormula() {
         return mCell.getCellType().equals(CellType.FORMULA);
     }
    
     /**
      * Debug info
      */
     @Override
     public String toString() {
         return getString();
     }
     }
    
0

I encountered the same issue and easiest fix would be setting the CELL TYPE as STRING. This will avoid exceptions being prompted.

FileInputStream fis = new FileInputStream(new File(filePath));
XSSFWorkbook wb = new XSSFWorkbook(fis);
XSSFSheet sheet = wb.getSheetAt(0); // get first sheet
row.getCell(1).setCellType(CellType.STRING); // set Cell Type as String
String val = row.getCell(1).getStringCellValue(); // get the value as String type
System.out.println(val); // prints the value; 
0

Another option would be to force excel to evaluate the integer value as a string. To achieve that you will have to prefix a single quote before the number.

Here is an example appending a single quote to number 1:

enter image description here

0

Another way to get the cell value as String is calling the toString() method like following:

String strValue = yourCell.toString();

If the cell is a formula, you can evaluate it and get the value as following:

FormulaEvaluator formulaEvaluator = yourWorkBook.getCreationHelper().createFormulaEvaluator();
String strValue = formulaEvaluator.evaluate(yourCell)
                                  .formatAsString();
-1

Do you control the excel worksheet in anyway? Is there a template the users have for giving you the input? If so, you can have code format the input cells for you.

0
-1

It looks like this can't be done in the current version of POI, based on the fact that this bug:

https://issues.apache.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=46136

is still outstanding.

-2

We had the same problem and forced our users to format the cells as 'text' before entering the value. That way Excel correctly stores even numbers as text. If the format is changed afterwards Excel only changes the way the value is displayed but does not change the way the value is stored unless the value is entered again (e.g. by pressing return when in the cell).

Whether or not Excel correctly stored the value as text is indicated by the little green triangle that Excel displays in the left upper corner of the cell if it thinks the cell contains a number but is formated as text.

0
-2

cell.setCellType(Cell.CELL_TYPE_STRING); is working fine for me

1
-4

cast to an int then do a .toString(). It is ugly but it works.

1
  • The problem is that if there is 2.0 in A2 I need to get string "2.0", and if 2 then string "2". Commented Jul 28, 2009 at 10:31

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.