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MSOChick MSOChick is offline
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Default How to concatenate 3064 and 01 with 306401 as a result?

Hello,
Thanks for your help. It works fine when I do that, but when I
concatenate with another cell after that it still deletes the leading 0's.
I've tried fromatting the original cell with 430 as a text cell and it still
doesn't help. I've resorted to just adding the the extra 0's afterwards.

Thank you all for all of your help!

Regards,
Lia


"David Biddulph" wrote:

When the first number starts with a zero, such as 0430, then your result
cell will need to be formated as 000000, which was an option which you
mentioned in your OP.

The *100 is a way of saying "multiply by one hundred". Multiplying by one
hundred moves the digits two places to the left compared with the decimal
point.
--
David Biddulph

"MSOChick" wrote in message
...
Hello,
Ok, it works for the 01, but not when the first number of the lead
cell is a 0, such as 0430. By the way, what does the *100 stand for?

Thanks,
Lia


"Ron Coderre" wrote:

Try something like this:

A4: 3064
B4: either 01 (as text) or 1 (formated as 00)

C4: =A4*100+B4

Does that help?
***********
Regards,
Ron

XL2002, WinXP


"MSOChick" wrote:

I would like to be able to combine cells with 4 digits and 2 digits
respectively into a cell that results in the entire number returned
when zero
as the first or last digit of the donor cell. I want the zero to remain
in
place. Such as 3064 in A4 and 01 in B4 becoming 306401. I have tried to
concatenate using absolute value $, and ". I have also tried formatiing
with
set criteria such as 000000 or ###### and It does not work. I am using
Excel
2003. What am I doing wrong?