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It only means something important if you share your workbook with others.
Say you choose the short date option *03/14/2006. (I use the 4 digit year in my windows setting, so excel shows me a 4 digit year.) If you also use 4 digit years and share the workbook with a person who uses a 2 digit year, then all the cells that are formatted that way will appear as 2 digit years on their pc--while you see 4 digit years. That probably isn't too much of a problem. But if you use 2 digit years and share a workbook with someone like me who likes 4 digit years, then I may have trouble seeing your dates. I may have to widen the column or use a smaller font. But if you've protected the worksheet, your phone may be ringing with people yelling asking how to fix it! jb wrote: Except for items that have an asterisk (*) in the Type list (Number tab, Format Cells dialog box), date formats that you apply do not switch date orders with the operating system. -------------------------------------------- What does this really mean? -- Dave Peterson |
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