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Bill: Hey, welcome back to the Dueling Excel podcast. Iamp;#39;m Bill Jelen from MrExcel, Iamp;#39;ll be joined by a Mike Girvin from ExcelIsFun, this is our episode 122 - Entering Credit Cards in Excel! This is a really common problem, people try and keep track their credit cards in Excel. Annabeth is trying to enter credit card numbers, and sheamp;#39;s losing the last digit every single time here. Letamp;#39;s try 4300222233334444, BAM, that last 4 goes away, it replaced by a 0. Expiration date, so we have an expiration date of 02/17, and we lose the leading 0. 3-digit code 123 works great, but 023 losses the leading 0. Alright, the problem here is that Excel only deals with 15 digits of precision. Now this week on the MrExcel podcast on Wednesday, I had a number of 451 septillion, there were so many digits that we lost, you know, everything after the first 15 digits. And generally thatamp;#39;s close enough, but itamp;#39;s really frustrating with credit cards, because we nee