![]() ![]() It was so fast that I thought it hadn't worked, but it was perfect. I imported it into Excel, and each category I chose to import from Contacts was a column, each contact was a row. I don't know about importing into other programs - I know some email programs can't handle a CSV file with blank records, but if the record is blank in the contact list it will be blank in the CSV as well. It was far more customizable than I expected, and gave me a perfect CSV file of my Contacts contact list. Regardless, it worked for me and I can give it 5 stars for working like a champ and doing what it said it would do! I suspect that’s a problem with Excel, not the CSV file. If you just try to open the CSV by double-clicking it from Finder it won’t import the CSV correctly and you end up with all of the data in the first column (as was mentioned in a previous review). #Ab2csv download windowscsv file in order to have Excel for Windows go through the CSV import wizard. ![]() Well worth the 99 cents in the time it saved me!įor me, using Office 2016 for Windows, I needed to open Excel first and then do “File” -> “Open” and select the AB2CSV. ![]() By setting up the AB2CSV preferences before running the export it worked as advertised. I only wanted to export a subset of the entire contact list and only certain fields. I read the documentation first (after reading a few of the reviews) so I knew what to do. I needed to create a mail-merge address list to print envelopes and this app was the bridge to get me from Microsoft Contacts to Excel. The app worked exactly as described, exporting my OS X Contact list to a CSV file which I then imported into Excel. ![]()
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