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how can I set up engineering notation in numbers '09?

I am taking some electronics courses in college and need to be able to use engineering notation ie: 1E-3, 9E6, etc. How can I best set this up in Numbers '09? All of my entries are automatically being formated as scientific notation (not multiples of 3) and the only other option I can find is just standard numbers. Thank you for your assistance.

Numbers '09-OTHER, Mac OS X (10.7.3)

Posted on Feb 15, 2012 7:48 PM

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18 replies

Feb 16, 2012 12:37 AM in response to maineiac70

Hi,


Numbers doesn't have any built in format to do this, but it should be possible to set up a conversion from scientific notation to engineering notation, with a text string as the output. The result would be 'read only,' not useable in further calculations, but the number itself (in the cell formatted for scientific notation) would still exist and be useable.


What range of magnitudes are we talking about? What precision do you want in the results? A sample list showing the extremes (in scientific notation) would likely be useful.


Regards,

Barry

Jul 9, 2013 5:16 AM in response to maineiac70

Hi maineiac,


I understand. You want multiples of 1000 (micro, milli, Kilo, Mega...) for SI units.


eBombers solution from the link https://discussions.apple.com/thread/4820887?answerId=22307816022#22307816022


Hi, there is a small trick to engineering notation in Numbers:

You need a excel spreadsheet that has a cell in engineering notation.

Open it with numbers, copy the style and paste it into the cells of your spreadsheet and there you have! :O


Thank you for the link, eBomber. Is it possible to paste an example of that Excel format here? Could that be used to create a Custom Format in Numbers?


Regards,

Ian.

Jul 9, 2013 7:58 AM in response to eBomber

eBomber wrote:


In excel, with that format you get scientific notation, but in which the exponent is a multiple of three, which is what is intended (I think)

Yes, multiples of three in the exponent is what Engineering Notation is. The question is whether you could get by with scientific notation. In my past experience, Excel, like Numbers, has Scientific Notation but not Engineering Notation, despite eBomber's claim which I have to way to confirm. Perhaps he could post a screen shot of an Excel example showing the Format tool. All other references I've seen deny the presence in Excel. I just checked LibreOffice and it doesn't seem to be there either, and LibreOffice is usually a good mirror of Excel.


Barry has made the point that if it is critical to you, you can create a text string to simulate Engineering Notation. It's not going to be simple though. He may be working on an expression to do this in Numbers right now. 🙂


The easiest way I can think of would be to just type the answer in an Engineering Notation equivalent of the calculated Scientific Notation result and hide the calculation.


Jerry

Jul 13, 2013 4:19 AM in response to eBomber

Good Evening All,


eBomber's solution works if the OP has Excel (but as Jerry noted, the OP has not responded, so we are talking amongst ourselves).


Jerry's solution, using LEFT() works.


I found this works, using RIGHT() to grab the exponents of the straight Scientific value and Scientific divided by 10 and 100. (No need to consider the + or - of the exponent at this stage). Then find MOD(<each exponent>, 3) and test with IF() to see which MOD is zero (i.e. which exponent is an exact multiple of 3). Then grab the relevant ("Engineering") value from Columns B, C or D.


In Cell E2 and Filled Down:


=IF(MOD(RIGHT(B2,2),3)=0,B2,IF(MOD(RIGHT(C2,2),3)=0,C2,IF(MOD(RIGHT(D2,2),3)=0,D 2,"")))


User uploaded file


Hide Columns B, C and D for a neat look.


Regards,

Ian.

how can I set up engineering notation in numbers '09?

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