ExcelBanter

ExcelBanter (https://www.excelbanter.com/)
-   Excel Discussion (Misc queries) (https://www.excelbanter.com/excel-discussion-misc-queries/)
-   -   year changes when copied from one workbook to another (https://www.excelbanter.com/excel-discussion-misc-queries/15960-year-changes-when-copied-one-workbook-another.html)

Pgarbarini

year changes when copied from one workbook to another
 
I receive a file from one department and copy the information into another
file. When I do this the date changes. It adds one day and four years to the
date. The options has the 1904 date system selected. When I turn this off the
dates come in correctly but the rest of my dates in the worksheet change.
What can I do?

Ron de Bruin

Hi Pgarbarini

Use -1462 in the date cell after the date





--
Regards Ron de Bruin
http://www.rondebruin.nl



"Pgarbarini" wrote in message ...
I receive a file from one department and copy the information into another
file. When I do this the date changes. It adds one day and four years to the
date. The options has the 1904 date system selected. When I turn this off the
dates come in correctly but the rest of my dates in the worksheet change.
What can I do?




Dave Peterson

Saved from a previous post:

One workbook was using a base year of 1900 and the other was using 1904.
(tools|options|calculation tab|1904 date system)

One way to add those four years back is to find an empty cell, put 1462 into
that cell.

Copy that cell.

Select your range that contains the dates. Edit|PasteSpecial|click Add (in the
operation box).

You may have to reformat the cell as a date (mine turned to a 5 digit number).
But it should work.

You may want to do it against a copy...just in case.

(I'm not sure which one you'll fix. You may want to edit|pastespecial|click
subtract.)

Most windows users use 1900 as the base date. Mac users (mostly??) use 1904 as
the base date.


Pgarbarini wrote:

I receive a file from one department and copy the information into another
file. When I do this the date changes. It adds one day and four years to the
date. The options has the 1904 date system selected. When I turn this off the
dates come in correctly but the rest of my dates in the worksheet change.
What can I do?


--

Dave Peterson

clinhart

year changes when copied from one workbook to another
 
Why is this happening in the first place? It wasn't happening before to me,
then all of a sudden it started. Also, why should you have to input extra
numbers on dates, etc,, which I don't fully understand what you are saying to
do any way, just to copy dates from one worksheet to another? Isn't there a
"fix" for this? I am confused, and would really like to get it fixed because
I copy dates between worksheets all the time for work. Thank you.

"Dave Peterson" wrote:

Saved from a previous post:

One workbook was using a base year of 1900 and the other was using 1904.
(tools|options|calculation tab|1904 date system)

One way to add those four years back is to find an empty cell, put 1462 into
that cell.

Copy that cell.

Select your range that contains the dates. Edit|PasteSpecial|click Add (in the
operation box).

You may have to reformat the cell as a date (mine turned to a 5 digit number).
But it should work.

You may want to do it against a copy...just in case.

(I'm not sure which one you'll fix. You may want to edit|pastespecial|click
subtract.)

Most windows users use 1900 as the base date. Mac users (mostly??) use 1904 as
the base date.


Pgarbarini wrote:

I receive a file from one department and copy the information into another
file. When I do this the date changes. It adds one day and four years to the
date. The options has the 1904 date system selected. When I turn this off the
dates come in correctly but the rest of my dates in the worksheet change.
What can I do?


--

Dave Peterson


Peo Sjoblom[_2_]

year changes when copied from one workbook to another
 
It's because a date in Excel is a serial number So in Windows Jan 0 1900
then every day after that gets incremented by 1. You can check that by
taking a date and format it as General, for instance today's (Nov 19th 2008)
Excel date is 39772. For Excel for Mac the dates start on Jan 1 1904 thus
the difference and since Excel for Mac came out before Excel for Windows MS
couldn't use the same date system only if they wanted to compete in
spreadsheet programs since lotus was the big shot then.

--


Regards,


Peo Sjoblom

"clinhart" wrote in message
...
Why is this happening in the first place? It wasn't happening before to
me,
then all of a sudden it started. Also, why should you have to input extra
numbers on dates, etc,, which I don't fully understand what you are saying
to
do any way, just to copy dates from one worksheet to another? Isn't there
a
"fix" for this? I am confused, and would really like to get it fixed
because
I copy dates between worksheets all the time for work. Thank you.

"Dave Peterson" wrote:

Saved from a previous post:

One workbook was using a base year of 1900 and the other was using 1904.
(tools|options|calculation tab|1904 date system)

One way to add those four years back is to find an empty cell, put 1462
into
that cell.

Copy that cell.

Select your range that contains the dates. Edit|PasteSpecial|click Add
(in the
operation box).

You may have to reformat the cell as a date (mine turned to a 5 digit
number).
But it should work.

You may want to do it against a copy...just in case.

(I'm not sure which one you'll fix. You may want to
edit|pastespecial|click
subtract.)

Most windows users use 1900 as the base date. Mac users (mostly??) use
1904 as
the base date.


Pgarbarini wrote:

I receive a file from one department and copy the information into
another
file. When I do this the date changes. It adds one day and four years
to the
date. The options has the 1904 date system selected. When I turn this
off the
dates come in correctly but the rest of my dates in the worksheet
change.
What can I do?


--

Dave Peterson




clinhart

year changes when copied from one workbook to another
 
Thank you for the explanation - helpful info. However, how do I fix the date
system on my Mac and my PC's that I have to transfer files between daily to
get this to work? Is it somewhere in Excel? I can't find it on the Mac - I
am using Office for Mac 2008. Thanks.

"Peo Sjoblom" wrote:

It's because a date in Excel is a serial number So in Windows Jan 0 1900
then every day after that gets incremented by 1. You can check that by
taking a date and format it as General, for instance today's (Nov 19th 2008)
Excel date is 39772. For Excel for Mac the dates start on Jan 1 1904 thus
the difference and since Excel for Mac came out before Excel for Windows MS
couldn't use the same date system only if they wanted to compete in
spreadsheet programs since lotus was the big shot then.

--


Regards,


Peo Sjoblom

"clinhart" wrote in message
...
Why is this happening in the first place? It wasn't happening before to
me,
then all of a sudden it started. Also, why should you have to input extra
numbers on dates, etc,, which I don't fully understand what you are saying
to
do any way, just to copy dates from one worksheet to another? Isn't there
a
"fix" for this? I am confused, and would really like to get it fixed
because
I copy dates between worksheets all the time for work. Thank you.

"Dave Peterson" wrote:

Saved from a previous post:

One workbook was using a base year of 1900 and the other was using 1904.
(tools|options|calculation tab|1904 date system)

One way to add those four years back is to find an empty cell, put 1462
into
that cell.

Copy that cell.

Select your range that contains the dates. Edit|PasteSpecial|click Add
(in the
operation box).

You may have to reformat the cell as a date (mine turned to a 5 digit
number).
But it should work.

You may want to do it against a copy...just in case.

(I'm not sure which one you'll fix. You may want to
edit|pastespecial|click
subtract.)

Most windows users use 1900 as the base date. Mac users (mostly??) use
1904 as
the base date.


Pgarbarini wrote:

I receive a file from one department and copy the information into
another
file. When I do this the date changes. It adds one day and four years
to the
date. The options has the 1904 date system selected. When I turn this
off the
dates come in correctly but the rest of my dates in the worksheet
change.
What can I do?

--

Dave Peterson





David Biddulph[_2_]

year changes when copied from one workbook to another
 
Read again what Dave Peterson said:
"tools|options|calculation tab|1904 date system"
--
David Biddulph

"clinhart" wrote in message
...
Thank you for the explanation - helpful info. However, how do I fix the
date
system on my Mac and my PC's that I have to transfer files between daily
to
get this to work? Is it somewhere in Excel? I can't find it on the Mac -
I
am using Office for Mac 2008. Thanks.

"Peo Sjoblom" wrote:

It's because a date in Excel is a serial number So in Windows Jan 0 1900
then every day after that gets incremented by 1. You can check that by
taking a date and format it as General, for instance today's (Nov 19th
2008)
Excel date is 39772. For Excel for Mac the dates start on Jan 1 1904 thus
the difference and since Excel for Mac came out before Excel for Windows
MS
couldn't use the same date system only if they wanted to compete in
spreadsheet programs since lotus was the big shot then.

--


Regards,


Peo Sjoblom

"clinhart" wrote in message
...
Why is this happening in the first place? It wasn't happening before
to
me,
then all of a sudden it started. Also, why should you have to input
extra
numbers on dates, etc,, which I don't fully understand what you are
saying
to
do any way, just to copy dates from one worksheet to another? Isn't
there
a
"fix" for this? I am confused, and would really like to get it fixed
because
I copy dates between worksheets all the time for work. Thank you.

"Dave Peterson" wrote:

Saved from a previous post:

One workbook was using a base year of 1900 and the other was using
1904.
(tools|options|calculation tab|1904 date system)

One way to add those four years back is to find an empty cell, put
1462
into
that cell.

Copy that cell.

Select your range that contains the dates. Edit|PasteSpecial|click
Add
(in the
operation box).

You may have to reformat the cell as a date (mine turned to a 5 digit
number).
But it should work.

You may want to do it against a copy...just in case.

(I'm not sure which one you'll fix. You may want to
edit|pastespecial|click
subtract.)

Most windows users use 1900 as the base date. Mac users (mostly??)
use
1904 as
the base date.


Pgarbarini wrote:

I receive a file from one department and copy the information into
another
file. When I do this the date changes. It adds one day and four
years
to the
date. The options has the 1904 date system selected. When I turn
this
off the
dates come in correctly but the rest of my dates in the worksheet
change.
What can I do?

--

Dave Peterson







David Biddulph[_2_]

year changes when copied from one workbook to another
 
And if you want help on Excel for the Mac, use
news:microsoft.public.excel.macintosh
--
David Biddulph

"David Biddulph" <groups [at] biddulph.org.uk wrote in message
...
Read again what Dave Peterson said:
"tools|options|calculation tab|1904 date system"
--
David Biddulph

"clinhart" wrote in message
...
Thank you for the explanation - helpful info. However, how do I fix the
date
system on my Mac and my PC's that I have to transfer files between daily
to
get this to work? Is it somewhere in Excel? I can't find it on the
Mac - I
am using Office for Mac 2008. Thanks.

"Peo Sjoblom" wrote:

It's because a date in Excel is a serial number So in Windows Jan 0 1900
then every day after that gets incremented by 1. You can check that by
taking a date and format it as General, for instance today's (Nov 19th
2008)
Excel date is 39772. For Excel for Mac the dates start on Jan 1 1904
thus
the difference and since Excel for Mac came out before Excel for Windows
MS
couldn't use the same date system only if they wanted to compete in
spreadsheet programs since lotus was the big shot then.

--


Regards,


Peo Sjoblom

"clinhart" wrote in message
...
Why is this happening in the first place? It wasn't happening before
to
me,
then all of a sudden it started. Also, why should you have to input
extra
numbers on dates, etc,, which I don't fully understand what you are
saying
to
do any way, just to copy dates from one worksheet to another? Isn't
there
a
"fix" for this? I am confused, and would really like to get it fixed
because
I copy dates between worksheets all the time for work. Thank you.

"Dave Peterson" wrote:

Saved from a previous post:

One workbook was using a base year of 1900 and the other was using
1904.
(tools|options|calculation tab|1904 date system)

One way to add those four years back is to find an empty cell, put
1462
into
that cell.

Copy that cell.

Select your range that contains the dates. Edit|PasteSpecial|click
Add
(in the
operation box).

You may have to reformat the cell as a date (mine turned to a 5 digit
number).
But it should work.

You may want to do it against a copy...just in case.

(I'm not sure which one you'll fix. You may want to
edit|pastespecial|click
subtract.)

Most windows users use 1900 as the base date. Mac users (mostly??)
use
1904 as
the base date.


Pgarbarini wrote:

I receive a file from one department and copy the information into
another
file. When I do this the date changes. It adds one day and four
years
to the
date. The options has the 1904 date system selected. When I turn
this
off the
dates come in correctly but the rest of my dates in the worksheet
change.
What can I do?

--

Dave Peterson









clinhart

year changes when copied from one workbook to another
 
I'm sorry to seem so naive. But I have just switched from PC to Mac. I have
to transfer files between PC's and my Mac daily at work. Excel 2008 in Mac
does not have a tools/options menu choice. And I cannot change all of the
many PC's that I communicate with. So I cannot go into Excel on the PC's to
make the changes. I cannot access the news:microsoft.public.excel.macintosh
suggested below because when I try to enter it into browser, it insists upon
opening up Outlook Express, which I do not have on my Mac. I have tried
looking on other forums but cannot find an answer that I can implement. How
can I make the change on my Mac's Excel program? Thank you for your patience.

"David Biddulph" wrote:

And if you want help on Excel for the Mac, use
news:microsoft.public.excel.macintosh
--
David Biddulph

"David Biddulph" <groups [at] biddulph.org.uk wrote in message
...
Read again what Dave Peterson said:
"tools|options|calculation tab|1904 date system"
--
David Biddulph

"clinhart" wrote in message
...
Thank you for the explanation - helpful info. However, how do I fix the
date
system on my Mac and my PC's that I have to transfer files between daily
to
get this to work? Is it somewhere in Excel? I can't find it on the
Mac - I
am using Office for Mac 2008. Thanks.

"Peo Sjoblom" wrote:

It's because a date in Excel is a serial number So in Windows Jan 0 1900
then every day after that gets incremented by 1. You can check that by
taking a date and format it as General, for instance today's (Nov 19th
2008)
Excel date is 39772. For Excel for Mac the dates start on Jan 1 1904
thus
the difference and since Excel for Mac came out before Excel for Windows
MS
couldn't use the same date system only if they wanted to compete in
spreadsheet programs since lotus was the big shot then.

--


Regards,


Peo Sjoblom

"clinhart" wrote in message
...
Why is this happening in the first place? It wasn't happening before
to
me,
then all of a sudden it started. Also, why should you have to input
extra
numbers on dates, etc,, which I don't fully understand what you are
saying
to
do any way, just to copy dates from one worksheet to another? Isn't
there
a
"fix" for this? I am confused, and would really like to get it fixed
because
I copy dates between worksheets all the time for work. Thank you.

"Dave Peterson" wrote:

Saved from a previous post:

One workbook was using a base year of 1900 and the other was using
1904.
(tools|options|calculation tab|1904 date system)

One way to add those four years back is to find an empty cell, put
1462
into
that cell.

Copy that cell.

Select your range that contains the dates. Edit|PasteSpecial|click
Add
(in the
operation box).

You may have to reformat the cell as a date (mine turned to a 5 digit
number).
But it should work.

You may want to do it against a copy...just in case.

(I'm not sure which one you'll fix. You may want to
edit|pastespecial|click
subtract.)

Most windows users use 1900 as the base date. Mac users (mostly??)
use
1904 as
the base date.


Pgarbarini wrote:

I receive a file from one department and copy the information into
another
file. When I do this the date changes. It adds one day and four
years
to the
date. The options has the 1904 date system selected. When I turn
this
off the
dates come in correctly but the rest of my dates in the worksheet
change.
What can I do?

--

Dave Peterson











All times are GMT +1. The time now is 05:21 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
ExcelBanter.com