Please also consider NebulaXLite to create nicely formatted
spreadsheets for Excel, OpenOffice, and Google Docs.  When you
deliver CSV in response to a request for Excel, it's like
introducing someone to their new business software that looks
like DOS.  It just makes the business software seem antiquated
and people start looking elsewhere for more modern applications.

NebulaXLite is entirely free and fully functional for developers
and VARs that demo their software on end-user systems.  You can
download it, use it as long as you want, and we won't ever ask
you for a penny.  For production use, there is a one-time
purchase price of $200 for any server that goes live with
business reports.  There are no additional fees.  Support and
limited enhancements are always free.  There are no connectivity
components or any other hidden costs.  As a "lite" product, this
product model is simply to make it easy for a lot of people to do
something that makes MV look good.

Get more info, software, and full documentation here:
remove.pleaseNebula-RnD.com/products/xlite.htm 

Thanks for your time,
Tony Gravagno
Nebula Research and Development
TG@ remove.pleaseNebula-RnD.com
Nebula R&D sells mv.NET and other Pick/MultiValue products
worldwide, and provides related development services
remove.pleaseNebula-RnD.com/blog
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> From: Edward Brown
> Yes, if you quote-delimit all your fields then it's possible to
pass
> @VMs as line feeds, and it will do what you want.
> 
> From: Israel, John R.
> > We have lots of programs that export our data from 
> > UniData to tab-delimited text files.  Some of these 
> > are opened by Excel (which has its faults), some are 
> > imported into other databases.  These files will be 1) 
> > E-mailed as attachments or written to specific 
> > location on the network.
> > 
> > If I know that the users will always use Excel to open 
> > the attachment, I usually make the file extension 
> > "xls" so that it simply fires up Excel when 
> > double-clicked and parses everything out reasonably 
> > cleanly (but still drops leading zeros, converts big 
> > numbers to scientific notation, etc).
> 
> > We are using UniData on HP-Unix.
> > 
> > Is there a good way to convert @VMs to something that 
> > Excel will correctly convert to what would be 
> > equivalent to the Alt+Enter in Excel? I do not want 
> > the data on multiple rows - I want multiple lines with 
> > breaks within a single row/cell.

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