Numbers in cells overrun into adjacent cells. No longer see a button to open file.
I started from scratch and created an entirely new Excel file. I have no idea what was going on with the previous version of the file, but the new one now displays properly in Dropbox, the same as it looks within Excel, with no overlapping text from one cell to the next.
So, I suppose that solves my issue.
Thanks for all the assistance.
Hey there @Michael 103673, sorry to hear about this.
Can you please clarify if you're previewing the file within the mobile Dropbox app or if you're using a web browser instead?
Does it happen with all of your Excel files or just one?
Any additional information you can share is more than welcome, Michael.
This happens when previewing the file within the mobile Dropbox app in iOS and iPadOS. All Excel files do this when text fills the second field.
Hi @Michael 103673, so you're previewing the file locally using the Excel app, correct?
If you try to preview the file using either the web browser, or the desktop app, do you notice the same behavior?
This happens when previewing the file within the mobile Dropbox app.
Hi @Michael 103673, the preview feature in the Dropbox mobile app isn't 100% accurate for all files, and could result in some visual issues.
Does the file preview normally in the Excel mobile app?
Hi from me too, @Michael 103673. If you preview your files on a computer instead and on your web account, does the issue persist?
Using Mac displays properly in Finder window. With browser to display on web, it garbles just like it does in iOS and iPadOS as shown here from screenshot on web.
Thanks for the screenshot, Michael; appreciate that.
Does another browser, or even incognito window, make a difference?
Also, is this something that started happening just recently for all your Excel files, or has it always been like this more or less?
Doesn’t seem to matter which browser is used. They all present the same garbled display.
Has been this way at least since I first reported in June 2023, as dated in first post above.
I see. One more thing to clarify; you mentioned previously that this was working properly on your Finder, but not www.dropbox.com. This happened when testing this on your Mac web browser and not the mobile browsers on your iOS devices, correct?
I’m having a look with our team to see if there’s something else we can try. Thanks!
We've not received any other reports from other users. Are these normal Excel files created by yourself?
Are they created in the Excel app, the site, or converted from another format into Excel?
I am guessing that other users are not attempting to view their Excel files in Dropbox because they are likely to only exist within Microsoft OneDrive instead of Dropbox.
These are Excel files that I created in Excel (using either iMacOS or iPadOS).
They were created using either the Mac Excel app or the iPad Excel app. Doesn’t matter which, because they display the same in Dropbox as garbled (examples above) when the text in one cell overlaps into the adjacent cell.
None of the files have been converted from another format into Excel.
Hope this helps your technical people investigate and resolve this issue.
We have a large number of users using Office apps on iOS devices, and to my knowledge, none have reported this issue.
Could you create a new Excel file from the Dropbox site directly and, without copying and pasting data, try to replicate the issue?
Apparently what happens now when I attempt to replicate the previous issue by creating a new Excel file from Dropbox, without copying and pasting, instead of showing garbled (overwritten) text from one cell to the adjacent cell, the cell with more text than would normally show now wraps the text to the next line, thereby increasing its row height which is not an acceptable result.
I do not want to have any rows adjusted in height when there is more text to display in any cell. This modifies the original file as well. It also destroys the continuity of the entire spreadsheet and looks like it was made by a third grader!
But, it does not overwrite the next cell as previously mentioned. So, it seems now I have traded one issue for another.
Does that file also have this new behavior when viewing it in the Excel app?
What if the file was viewed in landscape mode, does the view expand to show the full cell?