Written by Allen Wyatt (last updated October 31, 2020)
This tip applies to Word 97, 2000, 2002, and 2003
Those who are familiar with the rich formatting features of Excel may long for a way to format numbers in a Word table just as easily. For instance, you may have a column of numbers that you want to format as currency, complete with the dollar sign. Unfortunately, Word does not allow you to do this type of formatting directly.
There is a work-around, however. You can use a field to insert any number you want in any format you want. For instance, let's say you have the number 65.78, and you want it formatted as currency in a particular table cell. All you need to do is follow these steps:
You can continue to insert numbers in this way. If you have quite a few of them, you may want to create a macro to automate the process. Entering numbers in this way will not affect your ability to create column totals, as well.
WordTips is your source for cost-effective Microsoft Word training. (Microsoft Word is the most popular word processing software in the world.) This tip (1773) applies to Microsoft Word 97, 2000, 2002, and 2003. You can find a version of this tip for the ribbon interface of Word (Word 2007 and later) here: Formatting Currency.
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2024-02-06 05:09:38
Stefan
Thanks, it works flawlessly in Word (Office 365). , but it is rather cumbersome. The formula also works without the "currency" sign, so it will create a number that has the separator ", ".
As some suggest, I rather copy the whole table back to Excel, format it there and copy it back to Word. A shame that after 20 years, Word didn't come up with some formatting help.
2022-10-09 09:29:08
yiming
correction on the previous comment:
for step 3, DON'T key in the parentheses, unless it is a negative number.
2022-10-09 09:17:20
yiming
This will work:
- for step 3, key in the number (65.78), complete with *parentheses*.
- after step 6, right-click in the cell and select update field.
2021-10-05 15:40:56
Matt Smith
Also couldn't get this to work, and, TBH, it's far quicker and easier to just add currency symbols/commas/decimals manually or copy the already formatted table over from excel.
I'm now questioning why I bothered looking this up, or why it was written, but there you go, life's a journey.
2021-03-02 19:24:25
Naive Bae
I cannot get this to work. I follow the instructions indicated and when I hit Shift+F9 at the end, the cell displays as completely empty with a blinking cursor. I tried substituting with the number given in the example above, and it didn't work either.
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