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show fractions rounded up to nearest 1/16th inch
I have cells formatted as fraction, up two digits. We are a mfg. company
cutting metal and if it is not on a tape measure, we don't use it. If we input in an odd decimal value, we can get stuff like 17/20 or other wierd unusable fractions. Is there a way to have the same cell of input to show a result rounded up to the absolute nearest 1/16th of an inch? |
Answer: show fractions rounded up to nearest 1/16th inch
Yes, there is a way to have the same cell of input to show a result rounded up to the absolute nearest 1/16th of an inch. Here are the steps:
Now, any input you enter into the cell will be displayed as a fraction with up to two digits, rounded to the nearest 1/4 inch. However, since you need to round to the nearest 1/16th inch, we need to take an additional step.
Now, any input you enter into the cell will be displayed as a fraction with up to two digits, rounded to the nearest 1/16th inch. If the input is not already a multiple of 1/16th inch, the cell will be formatted with the additional formatting you selected in step 7. |
show fractions rounded up to nearest 1/16th inch
Wouldn't the formatting to sixteenths work?
If you go to Format--Cells--Number--Fraction Then click on As Sixteenths? Or does that not meet your criteria? "John G." wrote: I have cells formatted as fraction, up two digits. We are a mfg. company cutting metal and if it is not on a tape measure, we don't use it. If we input in an odd decimal value, we can get stuff like 17/20 or other wierd unusable fractions. Is there a way to have the same cell of input to show a result rounded up to the absolute nearest 1/16th of an inch? |
show fractions rounded up to nearest 1/16th inch
If you don't have "As 16th (8/16)" as an option in the Fraction formatting
list then try a Custom format of # ??/16 -- HTH Sandy In Perth, the ancient capital of Scotland and the crowning place of kings Replace @mailinator.com with @tiscali.co.uk "John G." wrote in message ... I have cells formatted as fraction, up two digits. We are a mfg. company cutting metal and if it is not on a tape measure, we don't use it. If we input in an odd decimal value, we can get stuff like 17/20 or other wierd unusable fractions. Is there a way to have the same cell of input to show a result rounded up to the absolute nearest 1/16th of an inch? |
show fractions rounded up to nearest 1/16th inch
I looked at that..., but if it amounts to 1/4", we want it to show 1/4", not
4/16", that will slow down the process doing the conversion in the shop. I know, picky, picky. :-) John "akphidelt" wrote: Wouldn't the formatting to sixteenths work? If you go to Format--Cells--Number--Fraction Then click on As Sixteenths? Or does that not meet your criteria? "John G." wrote: I have cells formatted as fraction, up two digits. We are a mfg. company cutting metal and if it is not on a tape measure, we don't use it. If we input in an odd decimal value, we can get stuff like 17/20 or other wierd unusable fractions. Is there a way to have the same cell of input to show a result rounded up to the absolute nearest 1/16th of an inch? |
show fractions rounded up to nearest 1/16th inch
Not in the same cell, but =CEILING(A7,1/16) and format as # ??/16
-- David Biddulph "John G." wrote in message ... I have cells formatted as fraction, up two digits. We are a mfg. company cutting metal and if it is not on a tape measure, we don't use it. If we input in an odd decimal value, we can get stuff like 17/20 or other wierd unusable fractions. Is there a way to have the same cell of input to show a result rounded up to the absolute nearest 1/16th of an inch? |
show fractions rounded up to nearest 1/16th inch
Well, if you do want to be picky, try
=IF(MOD(CEILING(A1,1/16),1)=0.5,TEXT(CEILING(A1,1/16),"# ?/2"),IF(MOD(CEILING(A1,1/16),0.5)=0.25,TEXT(CEILING(A1,1/16),"# ?/4"),IF(MOD(CEILING(A1,1/16),0.25)=0.125,TEXT(CEILING(A1,1/16),"# ?/8"),TEXT(CEILING(A1,1/16),"# ?/16")))) -- David Biddulph "John G." wrote in message ... I looked at that..., but if it amounts to 1/4", we want it to show 1/4", not 4/16", that will slow down the process doing the conversion in the shop. I know, picky, picky. :-) John "akphidelt" wrote: Wouldn't the formatting to sixteenths work? If you go to Format--Cells--Number--Fraction Then click on As Sixteenths? Or does that not meet your criteria? "John G." wrote: I have cells formatted as fraction, up two digits. We are a mfg. company cutting metal and if it is not on a tape measure, we don't use it. If we input in an odd decimal value, we can get stuff like 17/20 or other wierd unusable fractions. Is there a way to have the same cell of input to show a result rounded up to the absolute nearest 1/16th of an inch? |
show fractions rounded up to nearest 1/16th inch
David,
Can I nest your code with =IF(F10+$H$9=$H$9,0,F10+$H$9) This references the cells that we want to have rounded up values in. This simply adds a number such as 3/4" or 7/8" or another arbitrary number to f10 for a finish size. "David Biddulph" wrote: Well, if you do want to be picky, try =IF(MOD(CEILING(A1,1/16),1)=0.5,TEXT(CEILING(A1,1/16),"# ?/2"),IF(MOD(CEILING(A1,1/16),0.5)=0.25,TEXT(CEILING(A1,1/16),"# ?/4"),IF(MOD(CEILING(A1,1/16),0.25)=0.125,TEXT(CEILING(A1,1/16),"# ?/8"),TEXT(CEILING(A1,1/16),"# ?/16")))) -- David Biddulph "John G." wrote in message ... I looked at that..., but if it amounts to 1/4", we want it to show 1/4", not 4/16", that will slow down the process doing the conversion in the shop. I know, picky, picky. :-) John "akphidelt" wrote: Wouldn't the formatting to sixteenths work? If you go to Format--Cells--Number--Fraction Then click on As Sixteenths? Or does that not meet your criteria? "John G." wrote: I have cells formatted as fraction, up two digits. We are a mfg. company cutting metal and if it is not on a tape measure, we don't use it. If we input in an odd decimal value, we can get stuff like 17/20 or other wierd unusable fractions. Is there a way to have the same cell of input to show a result rounded up to the absolute nearest 1/16th of an inch? |
show fractions rounded up to nearest 1/16th inch
On Thu, 8 May 2008 09:25:03 -0700, John G.
wrote: I have cells formatted as fraction, up two digits. We are a mfg. company cutting metal and if it is not on a tape measure, we don't use it. If we input in an odd decimal value, we can get stuff like 17/20 or other wierd unusable fractions. Is there a way to have the same cell of input to show a result rounded up to the absolute nearest 1/16th of an inch? I'm not sure what you mean by "rounded up to the absolute nearest 1/16th of an inch". Rounding UP does not necessarily go to the *nearest* 1/16th. For example, 1/16 + 1/64 would ROUND to 1/16 but would ROUNDUP to 2/16 (or 1/8). Either can be done in the cell of input, using a macro, but you need to decide which you want, and also whether it is OK to actually change the value that you have inputted to be rounded, or rounded up, to the appropriate 16th. Finally, you won't be able to ROUNDUP in the cell of input and NOT change the inputted value. --ron |
show fractions rounded up to nearest 1/16th inch
David,
This works great, but the results in the cell show a outlined square between my round number and my fraction. Not displaying a space properly. Wierd. But thanks for the code. Now to do something about the space being displayed by a square. I tried to paste it here but it did not show. "David Biddulph" wrote: Well, if you do want to be picky, try =IF(MOD(CEILING(A1,1/16),1)=0.5,TEXT(CEILING(A1,1/16),"# ?/2"),IF(MOD(CEILING(A1,1/16),0.5)=0.25,TEXT(CEILING(A1,1/16),"# ?/4"),IF(MOD(CEILING(A1,1/16),0.25)=0.125,TEXT(CEILING(A1,1/16),"# ?/8"),TEXT(CEILING(A1,1/16),"# ?/16")))) -- David Biddulph "John G." wrote in message ... I looked at that..., but if it amounts to 1/4", we want it to show 1/4", not 4/16", that will slow down the process doing the conversion in the shop. I know, picky, picky. :-) John "akphidelt" wrote: Wouldn't the formatting to sixteenths work? If you go to Format--Cells--Number--Fraction Then click on As Sixteenths? Or does that not meet your criteria? "John G." wrote: I have cells formatted as fraction, up two digits. We are a mfg. company cutting metal and if it is not on a tape measure, we don't use it. If we input in an odd decimal value, we can get stuff like 17/20 or other wierd unusable fractions. Is there a way to have the same cell of input to show a result rounded up to the absolute nearest 1/16th of an inch? |
show fractions rounded up to nearest 1/16th inch
On Thu, 8 May 2008 18:58:29 +0100, "David Biddulph" <groups [at]
biddulph.org.uk wrote: Well, if you do want to be picky, try =IF(MOD(CEILING(A1,1/16),1)=0.5,TEXT(CEILING(A1,1/16),"# ?/2"),IF(MOD(CEILING(A1,1/16),0.5)=0.25,TEXT(CEILING(A1,1/16),"# ?/4"),IF(MOD(CEILING(A1,1/16),0.25)=0.125,TEXT(CEILING(A1,1/16),"# ?/8"),TEXT(CEILING(A1,1/16),"# ?/16")))) -- David Biddulph Might be simpler to just use: =CEILING(A2,1/16) and then custom format the cell as # ??/?? --ron |
show fractions rounded up to nearest 1/16th inch
Ron,
That works and without a oddly displayed spacing character. This site has been a gem to use. Thanks again. John "Ron Rosenfeld" wrote: On Thu, 8 May 2008 18:58:29 +0100, "David Biddulph" <groups [at] biddulph.org.uk wrote: Well, if you do want to be picky, try =IF(MOD(CEILING(A1,1/16),1)=0.5,TEXT(CEILING(A1,1/16),"# ?/2"),IF(MOD(CEILING(A1,1/16),0.5)=0.25,TEXT(CEILING(A1,1/16),"# ?/4"),IF(MOD(CEILING(A1,1/16),0.25)=0.125,TEXT(CEILING(A1,1/16),"# ?/8"),TEXT(CEILING(A1,1/16),"# ?/16")))) -- David Biddulph Might be simpler to just use: =CEILING(A2,1/16) and then custom format the cell as # ??/?? --ron |
show fractions rounded up to nearest 1/16th inch
Ron,
How do I meld your answer with this =IF(F10+$H$9=$H$9,0,F10+$H$9) in the same cell? "Ron Rosenfeld" wrote: On Thu, 8 May 2008 18:58:29 +0100, "David Biddulph" <groups [at] biddulph.org.uk wrote: Well, if you do want to be picky, try =IF(MOD(CEILING(A1,1/16),1)=0.5,TEXT(CEILING(A1,1/16),"# ?/2"),IF(MOD(CEILING(A1,1/16),0.5)=0.25,TEXT(CEILING(A1,1/16),"# ?/4"),IF(MOD(CEILING(A1,1/16),0.25)=0.125,TEXT(CEILING(A1,1/16),"# ?/8"),TEXT(CEILING(A1,1/16),"# ?/16")))) -- David Biddulph Might be simpler to just use: =CEILING(A2,1/16) and then custom format the cell as # ??/?? --ron |
show fractions rounded up to nearest 1/16th inch
Ron,
I have taken everything that you have suggested and came up with a solution that works just fine. Thank goodness we aren't going to the moon on my work here. We make storefront or window framing here, and we have a plus minus of 1/8". So rounding up to another 16th of inch will not really hurt us. What it does is keeps us covered on the plus side for material amounts and costs. Better to be a tad up that low. We can always take some away, but adding on when not budgeted can be problematic. Thanks for all your help. I should have posted in the newbie area. John "Ron Rosenfeld" wrote: On Thu, 8 May 2008 09:25:03 -0700, John G. wrote: I have cells formatted as fraction, up two digits. We are a mfg. company cutting metal and if it is not on a tape measure, we don't use it. If we input in an odd decimal value, we can get stuff like 17/20 or other wierd unusable fractions. Is there a way to have the same cell of input to show a result rounded up to the absolute nearest 1/16th of an inch? I'm not sure what you mean by "rounded up to the absolute nearest 1/16th of an inch". Rounding UP does not necessarily go to the *nearest* 1/16th. For example, 1/16 + 1/64 would ROUND to 1/16 but would ROUNDUP to 2/16 (or 1/8). Either can be done in the cell of input, using a macro, but you need to decide which you want, and also whether it is OK to actually change the value that you have inputted to be rounded, or rounded up, to the appropriate 16th. Finally, you won't be able to ROUNDUP in the cell of input and NOT change the inputted value. --ron |
show fractions rounded up to nearest 1/16th inch
Presumably =IF(F10=0,0,CEILING(F10+$H$9,1/16)) ?
-- David Biddulph "John G." wrote in message ... Ron, How do I meld your answer with this =IF(F10+$H$9=$H$9,0,F10+$H$9) in the same cell? "Ron Rosenfeld" wrote: On Thu, 8 May 2008 18:58:29 +0100, "David Biddulph" <groups [at] biddulph.org.uk wrote: Well, if you do want to be picky, try =IF(MOD(CEILING(A1,1/16),1)=0.5,TEXT(CEILING(A1,1/16),"# ?/2"),IF(MOD(CEILING(A1,1/16),0.5)=0.25,TEXT(CEILING(A1,1/16),"# ?/4"),IF(MOD(CEILING(A1,1/16),0.25)=0.125,TEXT(CEILING(A1,1/16),"# ?/8"),TEXT(CEILING(A1,1/16),"# ?/16")))) -- David Biddulph Might be simpler to just use: =CEILING(A2,1/16) and then custom format the cell as # ??/?? --ron |
show fractions rounded up to nearest 1/16th inch
On Thu, 8 May 2008 13:10:03 -0700, John G.
wrote: Ron, I have taken everything that you have suggested and came up with a solution that works just fine. Thank goodness we aren't going to the moon on my work here. We make storefront or window framing here, and we have a plus minus of 1/8". So rounding up to another 16th of inch will not really hurt us. What it does is keeps us covered on the plus side for material amounts and costs. Better to be a tad up that low. We can always take some away, but adding on when not budgeted can be problematic. Thanks for all your help. I should have posted in the newbie area. John Glad your solution is working. --ron |
show fractions rounded up to nearest 1/16th inch
Hi John,
I think my dad is in the same industry as you and he told me to do something like yours. I'm stuck and google for solution when i come across this website. I convert everything into mm to do some calculation but I don't know how to convert it back to the fraction in inch. Do you mind sharing how you go about doing it? Thanks. |
show fractions rounded up to nearest 1/16th inch
Assume you have 10 mm in a A1
In B1 enter =A!/25.4 Format to NumberFractionsSixteenths Display will be 6/16 Gord Dibben MS Excel MVP On Fri, 16 May 2008 22:42:28 -0700, aiky wrote: Hi John, I think my dad is in the same industry as you and he told me to do something like yours. I'm stuck and google for solution when i come across this website. I convert everything into mm to do some calculation but I don't know how to convert it back to the fraction in inch. Do you mind sharing how you go about doing it? Thanks. |
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