How to enter + sign before positive number in excel

  Friends who often use excel should all know that when entering positive and negative numbers in excel, the "-" sign will be displayed before the negative number, but the positive sign will not be displayed by default before the positive number. How to add a "+" sign in front of the number? How to enter a plus sign in excel? The following editor will bring you the setting method of positive number with + in excel. Let's take a look if you need it.

 

  Method overview

 

  First select the range of cells where you want to display the plus sign, then in the Numbers group, click the dialog box launcher, click Custom in the dialog box, and in the box under Type, type "+ 0;-0;0;@", it is best to enter it in English. After confirming, you will find that when you enter a positive number in it, "+" will be automatically added before the positive number.

 

  step

 

  1. Start Excel 2007, open the workbook that needs to be set, and then in the workbook, first select the range of cells you want to display the positive sign.

 

  2. Click the Home tab, and in the Numbers group, click the dialog launcher.

 

Excel positive numbers have +

 

  3. Click the "Number" tab, click Category, in the Category box, click the Customize button, and then in the box under Type, type "+0;-0;0;@" (note that when entering method to keep half-width characters, that is, English input mode), after the input is completed, click OK.

 

How to input plus sign in excel

 

  Positive numbers already in the above fields are now automatically preceded by a plus sign "+", and when a positive number is entered there, a positive number is automatically preceded by a "+".

 

  Excel allows users to define the display format of positive numbers, negative numbers, zero values ​​and text at the same time, and they are separated by a semicolon ";". For example, in the custom format "+0;-0;0;", the "+0" before the first semicolon defines the display format of positive numbers, and the "-0" before the second semicolon is Defines the display format of negative numbers; the "0" before the third semicolon is the display format that defines the zero value; the "@" after the third semicolon is the display format that defines the text, that is, the normal display text. If no character is typed in a position between the three semicolons, the type of data is hidden, for example, the format "0;-0;;@" hides the zero value in the cell.

 

  After understanding these, you can use it to complete some special requirements, such as to hide all data (including text) in the entire worksheet, you can define all cells in the entire table as ";; ;" format, you can do it.

 

  Original text: http://www.285868.com/jiaocheng/jpc/show-12143.html

 

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