I want to apply the % (percentage) number format using open XML C#
I have numeric value 3.6 that I want to display that number in excel as `3.6%.
How do I achieve that?
I want to apply the % (percentage) number format using open XML C#
I have numeric value 3.6 that I want to display that number in excel as `3.6%.
How do I achieve that?
WorkbookStylesPart sp = workbookPart.AddNewPart<WorkbookStylesPart>();
Create a stylesheet,
sp.Stylesheet = new Stylesheet();
Create a numberingformat,
sp.Stylesheet.NumberingFormats = new NumberingFormats();
// #.##% is also Excel style index 1
NumberingFormat nf2decimal = new NumberingFormat();
nf2decimal.NumberFormatId = UInt32Value.FromUInt32(3453);
nf2decimal.FormatCode = StringValue.FromString("0.0%");
sp.Stylesheet.NumberingFormat.Append(nf2decimal);
Create a cell format and apply the numbering format id
cellFormat = new CellFormat();
cellFormat.FontId = 0;
cellFormat.FillId = 0;
cellFormat.BorderId = 0;
cellFormat.FormatId = 0;
cellFormat.NumberFormatId = nf2decimal.NumberFormatId;
cellFormat.ApplyNumberFormat = BooleanValue.FromBoolean(true);
cellFormat.ApplyFont = true;
//append cell format for cells of header row
sp.Stylesheet.CellFormats.AppendChild<CellFormat>(cellFormat);
//update font count
sp.Stylesheet.CellFormats.Count = UInt32Value.FromUInt32((uint)sp.Stylesheet.CellFormats.ChildElements.Count);
//save the changes to the style sheet part
sp.Stylesheet.Save();
and when you append the value to the cell have the following center code hereonversion and apply the style index in my case i had three style index hence the 3 one was my percentage style index i.e 2 since the indexes start from 0
string val = Convert.ToString(Convert.ToDecimal(value)/100);
Cell cell = new Cell();
cell.DataType = new EnumValue<CellValues>(CellValues.Number);
cell.CellValue = new CellValue(val);
cell.StyleIndex = 2;
row.Append(cell);
Unfortunately there isn't a straight-forward answer. If you download the OpenXML Productivity Tool for Microsoft Office, you can dissect a simple spreadsheet and see how it formats the number. To do just what you want you would need to:
WHEW!
A generally better option is to look at ClosedXML at http://closedxml.codeplex.com/ (horrid name). It's an open source (NOT GPL! - check the license) library that puts useful extensions on OpenXML. To format a cell of a worksheet, you'd instead do:
worksheet.Cell(row, col).Value = "0.036";
worksheet.Cell(row, col).Style.NumberFormat.Format = "0.0%";
(from http://closedxml.codeplex.com/wikipage?title=Styles%20-%20NumberFormat&referringTitle=Documentation )
UPDATE ClosedXML has moved to GitHub at https://github.com/ClosedXML/ClosedXML
Excel contains predefined formats to format strings in various ways. The s
attribute on a cell element will refer to a style which will refer to a number format that will correspond to the percent format you want. See this question/answer for more information.
Here is the CellFormat object you will need to create in order to have the 0.00% mask applied to your number. In this case you want the predefined format number 10 or 0.00%:
CellFormat cellFormat1 = new CellFormat(){ NumberFormatId = (UInt32Value)10U, FontId = (UInt32Value)0U, FillId = (UInt32Value)0U, BorderId = (UInt32Value)0U, FormatId = (UInt32Value)0U, ApplyNumberFormat = true };
Here is a quick way to insert the CellFormat into the workbook:
CellFormats cellFormats = workbookPart.WorkbookStylesPart.Stylesheet.Elements<CellFormats>().First();
cellFormats.Append(cellFormat);
uint styleIndex = (uint)cellFormats.Count++;
You will then need to get the cell that has the 3.6 in it and set it's s
attribute (StyleIndex) to the newly inserted cell format:
Cell cell = workSheetPart.Worksheet.Descendants<Cell>().SingleOrDefault(c => cellAddress.Equals("A1"));
cell.StyleIndex = styleIndex;
You can do it in a simple way. If you want to apply it on single cell then do this,
worksheet.Cell(9, 10).Style.NumberFormat.Format = "#,##0.00\\%";
And If you want to apply it on a Range of Cells then do this,
worksheet.Range(9, 10, 15, 10).Style.NumberFormat.Format = "#,##0.00\\%";
you can also find more formats Here, and also you can find the same from Excel as well.