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I have an enormous spreadsheet with many dates. I need to insert the sheet
into another workbook. When I copy it, however, all of the dates get funked up in the destination workbook: "3/6/07," for example, morphs horribly into "3/5/03". I've checked the serial numbers for the same dates in the original workbook and the new workbook, and they're the same: as an unformatted number, 3/5/03 shows itself to be 37685, which is the serial number for the date in the source workbook before the grotesque metamorphosis.(3/6/07). Needless to say, this is all aboslutely awful. I suspect the destination workbook is simply corrupt, because when I copy sample dates from the original source workbook into a fresh one, they appear just fine. Still, I need to know, is there anything that might be done to rescue the possibly-corrupt workbook? Much workj has gone into it that simply copying all sheets into a new workbook makes impractical. Please, please help! |
#2
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V. Hatherley wrote:
I have an enormous spreadsheet with many dates. I need to insert the sheet into another workbook. When I copy it, however, all of the dates get funked up in the destination workbook: "3/6/07," for example, morphs horribly into "3/5/03". I've checked the serial numbers for the same dates in the original workbook and the new workbook, and they're the same: as an unformatted number, 3/5/03 shows itself to be 37685, which is the serial number for the date in the source workbook before the grotesque metamorphosis.(3/6/07). Needless to say, this is all aboslutely awful. I suspect the destination workbook is simply corrupt, because when I copy sample dates from the original source workbook into a fresh one, they appear just fine. Still, I need to know, is there anything that might be done to rescue the possibly-corrupt workbook? Much workj has gone into it that simply copying all sheets into a new workbook makes impractical. Please, please help! I think the destination workbook has a different sysstem of dates... Before copying the sheet to destination workbook, in destination workbook try this: Menu Tools, Options, select Calculation tab In Workbook Opsions section uncheck "Date System 1904" (or something like this...) -- (I'm not sure of names of menus, options and commands, because translating from the Italian version of Excel...) Hope I helped you. Thanks in advance for your feedback. Ciao Franz Verga from Italy |
#3
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Oh, my God! That did it! The source workbook uses the 1904 dates system, and
I never even thought to check! Franz, you're the best--thanks! You've saved me from horrible, horrible, pain! "Franz Verga" wrote: V. Hatherley wrote: I have an enormous spreadsheet with many dates. I need to insert the sheet into another workbook. When I copy it, however, all of the dates get funked up in the destination workbook: "3/6/07," for example, morphs horribly into "3/5/03". I've checked the serial numbers for the same dates in the original workbook and the new workbook, and they're the same: as an unformatted number, 3/5/03 shows itself to be 37685, which is the serial number for the date in the source workbook before the grotesque metamorphosis.(3/6/07). Needless to say, this is all aboslutely awful. I suspect the destination workbook is simply corrupt, because when I copy sample dates from the original source workbook into a fresh one, they appear just fine. Still, I need to know, is there anything that might be done to rescue the possibly-corrupt workbook? Much workj has gone into it that simply copying all sheets into a new workbook makes impractical. Please, please help! I think the destination workbook has a different sysstem of dates... Before copying the sheet to destination workbook, in destination workbook try this: Menu Tools, Options, select Calculation tab In Workbook Opsions section uncheck "Date System 1904" (or something like this...) -- (I'm not sure of names of menus, options and commands, because translating from the Italian version of Excel...) Hope I helped you. Thanks in advance for your feedback. Ciao Franz Verga from Italy |
#4
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![]() Excel has two date settings. Looks like your source workbook uses the 1904 date system, whilst the second uses the default 1900 date system. Change one by using Tools Options Calculation and checking/unchecking as necessary "1904 date system" -- daddylonglegs ------------------------------------------------------------------------ daddylonglegs's Profile: http://www.excelforum.com/member.php...o&userid=30486 View this thread: http://www.excelforum.com/showthread...hreadid=574132 |
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