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When exporting a PDF from Acrobat DC to Excel, the 22-digit numbers in the PDF are being 'truncated' by Excel. For example: 0015101820990791961357 in the original PDF is being changed to 0015101820990792000000 in Excel. I know this has to do with Excel's coding; it sees strings of numbers *as* numbers, and changes the cell format to be a number... and Excel can only handle 15 significant digits, rounding off the 16th and changing the remaining digits to 0's. If the cell is converted to a text format prior to entering in the data, then it will hold the full number as it is entered. The problem here is there is no way to format the cells before the imported information gets in there when you export from Adobe Acrobat DC.
Interestingly, this exporting worked perfectly fine from Adobe Acrobat XI Pro... but after the upgrade to DC, that's when it stopped working. I'm not sure if something changed in the way that Acrobat exports the text from the original PDF... in such a way that Excel decides it is looking at a number and automatically changes the format of the cell.
Does anyone have any ideas on why this is happening after upgrading to DC? Does DC have any special settings that I'm not seeing related to how data is exported and how numbers/text should be handled? Has anyone run into this same issue before?
Thanks in advance!
The "relevant" stuff:
Windows 7 x64
Adobe Acrobat DC
Microsoft Office 2010
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So I was able to resolve the truncating issue by uninstalling and re-installing Adobe Acrobat DC -- however now we have a new error.
When exporting to Excel Workbook (or XML Spreadsheet), the numbers show correctly, but all of the information is in one column. i.e. 55001 0015101820990791961357 $dollar amount 6758 etc (all in the same column... just one long text input)
as opposed to:
Column A Column B Column C
55001 0015101820990791961357 $dollar amount etc.
I'm not seeing any sort of settings that might control this... but any insight on this issue would be greatly apprciated.
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Hi BLanning,
We apologize for the issue you are facing.
Would request you to send the file @ agarwala@adobe.com to investigate the exact issue.
Thanks,
Girija
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I currently have a ticket open, and as far as I know, it has been escalated to Senior Tech Support.
I was able to workaround the single-column issue using Excel's 'Text-to-Columns' command, but there is a conversion issue from Acrobat DC to Excel, causing some of the information to be merged into the same line, i.e.:
12345
CCS
gets converted to:
1c2c3s45
The letters from the 2nd line will end up mixed in with the numbers (or vise versa) from the 1st line, and they will appear as sub-script. This causes all of the data after that 'CCS' location to be jumbled up and in the wrong location, and then Excel has no idea where to put it, so every new piece of text gets placed on its own column, i.e.
12345 CCS $12.00 12345 TEXT DIR 1234
becomes:
12345
CCS
$12.00
12345
TEXT
DIR
1234
So, to re-organize, one would have to move each cell very carefully to its corresponding line, checking it against the original PDF to make sure it goes into the right place. Sort of defeats the purpose of trying to convert it to Excel.
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I have sent you a private message.
Please go through it once.
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I replied to your private message with the Adobe case number related to this issue.
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@girijaAgarwal I got the same issue when converting my pdf to xls!
Any viable solution ?
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Hello 🙂
Just coming across this problem now has anyone found a solution yet?
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Hello! I'm also facing this issue and would love to know if there's a solution