Forum Discussion
MarkShnier__You
3 years agoQrew Legend
You must never use a numeric field type to hold "numbers" longer than 12 digits. You must use a text field. All computers have a limit on the size of a number they can hold. If you enter numbers in QuickBase longer than 12 digits then the number actually gets rounded and converted to maybe some crazy scientific notation. And you lose accuracy. So the solution is to convert the field to a text field but before you do that you have to consider the implications of it in terms of look up fields and things like that.
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Mark Shnier (YQC)
mark.shnier@gmail.com
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- jrossausiscom3 years agoQrew Assistant CaptainHey Mark, thanks for the reply.
We run into this problem with excel, (12 digits and then 15 as the hard cut). But it sounds like if we have them set to text we should be okay. Currently that is what we do I believe.
You know I kind of figured with newer hardware, 64 bit systems, etc., that the digit limits could be way higher now days. haha.
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John Ross
------------------------------- ScottBurday__Tr3 years agoQrew TraineeA simple rule that I learned a long time ago; if you need to do math with the field then it should be numeric. If you do not need to do math with the field it should be text.
For items like ICCIDs, serial numbers, etc. there is no need to do any math with the data so it should be a text. Then you are unlimited in the length of the data.
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Scott Burday, Trinity
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