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- Using custom number formatting #,##0. 00 and #. ##0,00 in VBA . . .
What am I doing wrong with "#,##0 00" and "# ##0,00" custom number formatting? This is the official documentation (link) Some examples can also be found in Excel where we can right click the cell and select "Format Cells", then under the "Number" tab, we can also see some of the examples (which is what I used):
- What could these IP addresses with MAC: 00:00:00:00:00:00 be?
Flags 0x0 and HW address of 00:00:00:00:00:00 mean it is a failed ARP To test ping an unused IP address on the local network and then relist That IP address should now also show in the output of cat proc net arp Can also use the arp command which should show (incomplete) for the HWaddress for the IP addresses in question
- syntax - What is \00 in Python? - Stack Overflow
In Python 3 octal literals start with 0o instead 00 specifically is 0 The leading \ in \00 is a way of specifying a byte value, a number between 0-255 It's normally used to represent a character that isn't on your keyboard, or otherwise can't be easily represented in a string
- MySQL Incorrect datetime value: 0000-00-00 00:00:00
Normally, it should have added a null value to the timestampes (created_at, updated_at) but for some reason was adding Time stamp of '0000-00-00 00:00:00' value
- How can I format a decimal to always show 2 decimal places?
I want to display: 49 as 49 00 and: 54 9 as 54 90 Regardless of the length of the decimal or whether there are are any decimal places, I would like to display a Decimal with 2 decimal places, and I'd
- Which Java Date format is this YYYY-MM-DD 00:00:00+00:00?
I have some data which has date mentioned as "2013-06-30 00:00:00+00:00" I checked the different date formats , however was not able to find this one Can someone please help ?
- python - Limiting floats to two decimal points - Stack Overflow
For the analogous issue with the standard library Decimal class, see How can I format a decimal to always show 2 decimal places?
- Write a number with two decimal places SQL Server
The # will ignore trailing zeroes so 5 10 will become 5 1 or 4 00 will just show 4 on its own The '0 00' format will ensure you always get exactly two decimal places
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