93

I have an Excel sheet generated with Epplus, I am experiencing some pain points and I wish to be directed by someone who have solved a similar challenge.

I need to apply number formatting to a double value and I want to present it in Excel like this.

  • 8 → 8.0
  • 12 → 12.0
  • 14.54 → 14.5
  • 0 → 0.0

Here is my code

ws.Cells[row, col].Style.Numberformat.Format = "##0.0";

The final Excel file always append E+0 to the end of this format and therefore presents the final values like this instead.

  • 8 → 8.0E+0
  • 12 → 12.0E+0
  • 14.54 → 14.5E+0
  • 0 → 000.0E+0

When I check in the format cells of the generated Excel sheet, I see that my format appears as ##0.0E+2 instead of ##0.0 that I applied.

What may be wrong?

1
  • ##0.0 is for Currency format. "0.00" is for Number format
    – Richa Garg
    Oct 24, 2016 at 5:22

5 Answers 5

217

Here are some number format options for EPPlus:

//integer (not really needed unless you need to round numbers, Excel will use default cell properties)
ws.Cells["A1:A25"].Style.Numberformat.Format = "0";

//integer without displaying the number 0 in the cell
ws.Cells["A1:A25"].Style.Numberformat.Format = "#";

//number with 1 decimal place
ws.Cells["A1:A25"].Style.Numberformat.Format = "0.0";

//number with 2 decimal places
ws.Cells["A1:A25"].Style.Numberformat.Format = "0.00";

//number with 2 decimal places and thousand separator
ws.Cells["A1:A25"].Style.Numberformat.Format = "#,##0.00";

//number with 2 decimal places and thousand separator and money symbol
ws.Cells["A1:A25"].Style.Numberformat.Format = "€#,##0.00";

//percentage (1 = 100%, 0.01 = 1%)
ws.Cells["A1:A25"].Style.Numberformat.Format = "0%";

//accounting number format
ws.Cells["A1:A25"].Style.Numberformat.Format = "_-$* #,##0.00_-;-$* #,##0.00_-;_-$* \"-\"??_-;_-@_-";

Don't change the decimal and thousand separators to your own localization. Excel will do that for you.

By request some DateTime formatting options.

//default DateTime pattern
worksheet.Cells["A1:A25"].Style.Numberformat.Format = DateTimeFormatInfo.CurrentInfo.ShortDatePattern;

//custom DateTime pattern
worksheet.Cells["A1:A25"].Style.Numberformat.Format = "dd-MM-yyyy HH:mm";
7
  • Is there any similar reference for Date Time formats. I am trying to read a file that has the format specified as dd-mm-yy h:mm but in debug I see the format as : "[$-10409]m/d/yyyy\\ h:mm:ss\\ AM/PM" Mar 12, 2017 at 8:25
  • 1
    Added some examples, but basically it works the same as numbers.
    – VDWWD
    Mar 12, 2017 at 13:26
  • 1
    Nvm, found it. Instead of just using a symbol, one has to escape multiple characters. For CHF it could look like this: _ \"CHF\" * # ##0.00_ ;_ \"CHF\" * -# ##0.00_ ;_ \"CHF\" * \"-\"??_ ;_ @_ May 28, 2018 at 7:48
  • 3
    Don't change the decimal and thousand separators to your own localization. Excel will do that for you. That! Attempting to "fix" decimals is a huge source of bugs and broken formulas! Jul 26, 2018 at 7:28
  • 7
    If you want to format your cells as text, set Style.Numberformat.Format = "@"; May 24, 2019 at 0:43
3

Addition to Accepted Answer, because value Accept Object you must pass Number to Value For Example if your input is in string :

var input = "5";    
ws.Cells["A1:A25"].Value = double.Parse(input);
1

Another addition to the accepted answer: you can use nullable values and the formatting all looks good BUT it ends up being a string in Excel and you can't SUM, AVG etc.

So make sure you use the actual Value of the nullable.

2
  • what mean by value nullable? Mar 3, 2021 at 3:42
  • 1
    say you have Decimal? myDecimal = 0.4M; then to get a proper decimal into Excel (not just a string) you should do ws.Cells["A5"].Value = myDecimal.Value; so you send a non-nullable decimal to Excel by adding that ".Value"
    – Matt Kemp
    Mar 5, 2021 at 8:45
1

I solved it as follows, so I just load the model and change as per my model if it is int ordatetime

var li = typeof(Model)
              .GetProperties()
              .ToArray();


 using (var package = new ExcelPackage(stream))
            {
                var workSheet = package.Workbook.Worksheets.Add("Sheet1");

var i = 0;
                foreach (var c in li)
                {
                    i++;
                    if(c.PropertyType.Name == typeof(DateTime).Name || c.PropertyType.Name == typeof(DateTime?).Name)
                        workSheet.Column(i).Style.Numberformat.Format = DateTimeFormatInfo.CurrentInfo.ShortDatePattern; ;

                    if (c.PropertyType.Name == typeof(int).Name || c.PropertyType.Name == typeof(int?).Name)
                        workSheet.Column(i).Style.Numberformat.Format = "0";                    
                }

}
0

And if you want to format a specific column like column "B" to number format you can do it this way-

using (var package = new ExcelPackage())
{
  var worksheet = package.Workbook.Worksheets.Add("SHEET1");
  worksheet.Cells["A1"].LoadFromDataTable(dataTable, PrintHeaders: true);
  for (var col = 1; col < dataTable.Columns.Count + 1; col++)
  {
    if (col == 2)//col number 2 is equivalent to column B
    {
      worksheet.Column(col).Style.Numberformat.Format = "#";//apply the number formatting you need
    }
    worksheet.Column(col).AutoFit();
  }
  return File(package.GetAsByteArray(), XlsxContentType, "report.xlsx");//downloads file
}

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge that you have read and understand our privacy policy and code of conduct.

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