I've just noticed an issue that could be problematic (and hopefully hasn't come up yet). When editing a .csv, for numbers with extremely large values, Excel decides to truncate the value without warning.
E.g.: 72e1e39
In this case, I just changed the title names and saved. When I opened up GitHub, I noticed that two rows had also been edited. It automatically changed 1.30835x10^11 to 1.31x10^11. In this case, a difference of $165,000,000. The only way I was able to edit the column headings without having excel automatically drop the precision was by using Notepad. I don't know how we can ensure this hasn't happened in the past, and I'm not sure what the best way is to prevent it from happening in the future.
I've just noticed an issue that could be problematic (and hopefully hasn't come up yet). When editing a .csv, for numbers with extremely large values, Excel decides to truncate the value without warning.
E.g.: 72e1e39
In this case, I just changed the title names and saved. When I opened up GitHub, I noticed that two rows had also been edited. It automatically changed 1.30835x10^11 to 1.31x10^11. In this case, a difference of $165,000,000. The only way I was able to edit the column headings without having excel automatically drop the precision was by using Notepad. I don't know how we can ensure this hasn't happened in the past, and I'm not sure what the best way is to prevent it from happening in the future.