77
votes

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?

4
##0.0 is for Currency format. "0.00" is for Number format - Richa Garg

4 Answers

175
votes

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";
2
votes

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
votes

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.

0
votes

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
}