Date Function
Well, this formula has a potential flaw *if* the date is followed by another
character like a punctuation mark.
Maybe the "atomic option" is best afterall.
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Biff
Microsoft Excel MVP
"T. Valko" wrote in message
...
Thanks!
But, I think I'm using an atomic bomb to kill an ant!
That formula is a generic formula to extract a number from a string.
I like Luke's suggestion but it needs tweaked a bit.
Let's assume that there are no other numbers in the string and the date is
*always* in the format m/d/yyyy or m/dd/yyyy.
Luke's formula could fail when the date is at the start of the string.
Consider these strings:
1/1/2010 is the deadline
1/10/2010 is the deadline
10/1/2010 is the deadline
10/10/2010 is the deadline
The deadline is 1/1/2010
The deadline is 1/10/2011
The deadline is 10/1/2010
The deadline is 10/10/2010
The deadline of 1/1/2010 is firm
The deadline of 1/10/2010 is firm
The deadline of 10/1/2010 is firm
The deadline of 10/10/2010 is firm
So, Luke's formula with a tweak will account for all of the above:
=--TRIM(MID(" "&A1,FIND("/"," "&A1)-2,10))
--
Biff
Microsoft Excel MVP
"Ron@Buy" wrote in message
...
Brilliant Biff
"T. Valko" wrote:
Try this...
=LOOKUP(1E100,--MID(A2,MIN(FIND({0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9},A2&"01234567 89")),ROW(INDIRECT("1:"&LEN(A2)))))
Format as Date
--
Biff
Microsoft Excel MVP
"Jen_T" wrote in message
...
If a cell has text and numeric (date) is there a way to pull the date
out
easily ?
E.g.
Product dropped off on 11/01/2009 by Michelle Smith
I would like to see 11/01/2009
Thank you
.
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