Unable to download csv on ios
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Free Image Compressor. Puzzle Game Cube. Data Recovery Data Recovery. Blu-ray Player Blu-ray Player. Video Editor Video Editor. Screen Recorder Screen Recorder. How do I import them to my iPhone contacts? Part 1.
Part 2. Part 3. Copy link. Product version Highcharts current version Affected browser s iOS browsers Safari, Chrome The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:.
Fixed , export data download failed on iOS. TorsteinHonsi closed this in c93a Oct 31, Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub.
Already have an account? Sign in to comment. Fix suggested Type: Bug. Linked pull requests. Posted on May 7, AM. Jun 29, AM in response to rene beekman In response to rene beekman. CSV is a lousy data format, across country boundaries especially. Rather than worry over what Apple has or hasn't done about that, you could just drop your data into a text editor and use Find and Replace to convert to Tab Separated Variables, a more universal and much better behaved standard. Jun 29, AM.
Jun 28, AM in response to garryfromversailles In response to garryfromversailles. I had this same problem and was climbing the walls with Numbers being unable to correctly open a CVS, but it turns out there is a much better way to do this;. Jun 28, AM. Page content loaded. May 7, PM in response to garryfromversailles In response to garryfromversailles. If the file has a csv extension, not txt, right click and open it with Numbers or drop it on the Numbers icon in the dock.
If it has a txt extension, change it to csv. This assumes your decimal is a period, not a comma. If not, csv files must use a semicolon instead of a comma for the separator. May 7, PM. Jun 28, AM in response to rene beekman In response to rene beekman. Barry, in short: Badunits solution may work if your computer's region settings is north america and your csv uses commas to separate values and a period as decimal separators.
And, to make things more complicated, some of us have European region settings i. I have no idea what Apple was thinking if anything at all when they left out the import options interface for csv's, but the result is that if I follow Badunit's advise, every row in the csv ends up stuffed in a single cell, the entire file is stuffed in the first column.
At least this is true for the csvs that I have tried it with, but they do not contain floatingpoint numbers. Dropping the file onto the Numbers icon in the doc invokes the file open command and thus results in the same problem.
Creating a new spreadsheet and dropping the file onto the spreadsheet, opens the file correctly. As far as I'm concerned, given the above situation, the file open command in Numbers 2.
I don't "worry" about Apply, I don't have the self-deception to believe that it would make any difference. Why would I want to do that when all I have to do is drop them onto an already open spreadsheet to have them open properly??? Thanks for the feedback, I'll adjust the sensitivity of my worry detector.
I got what I thought was a clear alarm, but it must have been a false indication - Type II error. I think you may have missed Barry's point. He commented your your virtually verbatim quote of Badunit's advice as though you hadn't seen it. You still don't appear to have seen it. Well, it did, in that it sent me back to re-read the thread. I'd missed the detail—drop on the spreadsheet, vs drop on the Numbers icon.
Checking out your suggestion, though, indicates that, like Badunit's, it works only with some regional settings. Top: The csv file, with semi colon separators, was dropped on cell B2 of a table in an open Numbers document. Middle: The csv file, with semi colon separators, was dropped on an unoccupied space on Sheet 1 of the same Numbers document.
Bottom: The csv file, with comma separators, was dropped on an unoccupied space on Sheet 1 of the same Numbers document. Results from dropping the comma separated csv file on a table were essentially the same as the bottom example. From these results it appears " 2.
Yes, it does make a difference whether you drop a file on an application icon or on an open document window roughly the equivalent between open and import. However, if your regional settings are anything other than North American, or they do not comply with the US system of using points for decimal separators, and the csv you're opening does not comply with that format, you are probably better off using Yvan Koenig's or my solution.
Now, accuse me of whatever you want for thinking that a drag-and-drop soltution that merely changes the destination of the drop is "better" than a solution that involves fiddling with system settings. I'm fine with whatever side that coin drops but this is where the chronological reading comes in.
I do, however, take offense with the "some regions" remark - from where I'm sitting, "some regions" would include the just about entire continent of Europe and then some. And to be completely exhaustive: editing the csv itslef as has been suggested multiple times here is ok, as long as you only have the occassional file to open. Jun 29, PM.
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