Adding Custom Formatting to Numeric Fields

Adding Custom Formatting to Numeric Fields

Custom formatting gives you greater control over how numeric data appears in a result set. With custom formatting, you can apply Excel-style formatting options to numeric data shown in visualizations, or produced by custom fields or table calculations.

Using Custom Formatting in Visualizations

For visualizations with a Values tab in the gear menu:

ValueCustomization.png
  1. Click on the visualization’s gear menu.
  2. Select the Values tab.
  3. In the Value Format field, enter the custom formatting string.

For table visualizations:

CustomFormatVisualization1.png
  1. Click on the visualization’s gear menu.
  2. Select the Series tab.
  3. In the Format field under Customizations, expand the drop-down menu and select Custom at the bottom of the menu.

A new blank field will appear once you select Custom. Enter the custom formatting string in the blank field.

Using Custom Formatting with Table Calculations and Custom Fields

When creating or editing a table calculation or custom field, select Custom in the formatting drop-down and enter the custom format in the field below:

CustomFormattingTableCalc.png

Custom Formatting Examples

You can read Excel’s complete guide about how to specify these formats in their documentation. However, at this time date formatting, color formatting, and hexadecimal conversion are not supported.

Some of the most common formatting options are shown below. A format code using 0 requires that non-significant zeros be displayed if the number contains fewer digits than specified in the code. A format code using # only displays significant digits, even if there are fewer digits than specified in the code.

Some special characters, such as international currency symbols, must be treated as strings and enclosed in double quotes.

Caution

Excel-style formatting does not support many international number formats, such as 1.234,56 or 1 234,56. The system does support several international formats through the localization function. For information about localizing number formats, see the Localizing Number Formatting documentation page.

FORMATRESULT
0Integer (123)
00#Integer zero-padded to 3 places (001)
0 “String”Integer followed by a string (123 String) (“String” can be replaced with any text string)
0.##Number up to 2 decimals (1. or 1.2 or 1.23)
0.00Number with exactly 2 decimals (1.23)
00#.00Number zero-padded to 3 places and exactly 2 decimals (001.23)
#,##0Number with comma between thousands (1,234)
#,##0.00Number with comma between thousands and 2 decimals (1,234.00)
0.000 , , “M”Number in millions with 3 decimals (1.234 M) Division by 1 million happens automatically
0.000, “K”Number in thousands with 3 decimals (1.234 K) Division by 1 thousand happens automatically
$0Dollars with 0 decimals ($123)
$0.00Dollars with 2 decimals ($123.00)
“€”0Euros with 0 decimals (€123)
$# , ##0.00Dollars with comma between thousands and 2 decimals ($1,234.00)
$# . 00 ; ($#.00)Dollars with 2 decimals, positive values displayed normally, negative values wrapped in parenthesis
0%Display as percent with 0 decimals (1 becomes 1%)
0 . 00%Display as percent with 2 decimals (1 becomes 1.00%)
0%Convert to percent with 0 decimals (.01 becomes 1%)
0 . 00%Convert to percent with 2 decimals (.01 becomes 1.00%)
Share this Doc

Adding Custom Formatting to Numeric Fields

Or copy link

In this topic ...