General Number - The number is displayed with no thousand separator. : Number Format « Date Functions « VBA / Excel / Access / Word
VBA / Excel / Access / Word
1.
Access
2.
Application
3.
Data Type
4.
Data Type Functions
5.
Date Functions
6.
Excel
7.
File Path
8.
Forms
9.
Language Basics
10.
Math Functions
11.
Outlook
12.
PowerPoint
13.
String Functions
14.
Windows API
15.
Word
16.
XML
Java
Java Tutorial
Java Source Code / Java Documentation
Java Open Source
Jar File Download
Java Articles
Java Products
Java by API
Photoshop Tutorials
Maya Tutorials
Flash Tutorials
3ds-Max Tutorials
Illustrator Tutorials
GIMP Tutorials
C# / C Sharp
C# / CSharp Tutorial
C# / CSharp Open Source
ASP.Net
ASP.NET Tutorial
JavaScript DHTML
JavaScript Tutorial
JavaScript Reference
HTML / CSS
HTML CSS Reference
C / ANSI-C
C Tutorial
C++
C++ Tutorial
Ruby
PHP
Python
Python Tutorial
Python Open Source
SQL Server / T-SQL
SQL Server / T-SQL Tutorial
Oracle PL / SQL
Oracle PL/SQL Tutorial
PostgreSQL
SQL / MySQL
MySQL Tutorial
VB.Net
VB.Net Tutorial
Flash / Flex / ActionScript
XML
XML Tutorial
Microsoft Office PowerPoint 2007 Tutorial
Microsoft Office Excel 2007 Tutorial
Microsoft Office Word 2007 Tutorial
VBA / Excel / Access / Word
»
Date Functions
»
Number Format
General Number - The number is displayed with no thousand separator.
Sub
formatDemo1
()
Debug.Print Format
(
"12345"
,
"General Number"
)
End Sub
Related examples in the same category
1.
Currency - The number is displayed with two decimal places, a thousand separator, and the currency symbol appropriate to the system locale.
2.
Fixed - The number is displayed with two decimal places and at least one integer place.
3.
Standard - The number is displayed with two decimal places, at least one integer place, and a thousand separator (when needed).
4.
Percent - The number is displayed multiplied by 100, with two decimal places, and with a percent sign.
5.
Scientific - The number is displayed in scientific notation.
6.
Yes/No - A non-zero number is displayed as Yes; a zero number is displayed as No.
7.
True/False - A non-zero number is displayed as True; a zero number is displayed as False.
8.
On/Off - A non-zero number is displayed as On; a zero number is displayed as Off.
9.
Format(dblNumber "0.00")
10.
Format(dblNumber "000000.00")
11.
Format(dblNumber "#####0")
12.
Format(dblNumber "###,##0.00"): double
13.
Characters for Creating Your Own Number Formats
14.
returns a currency formatted with four decimal places:
www.java2java.com
|
Contact Us
Copyright 2009 - 12 Demo Source and Support. All rights reserved.
All other trademarks are property of their respective owners.