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#1
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I have created a document with several sheets, tracking video tapes and their
content, as well as date the tape was shot, etc. As projects are completed I am saving the sheet as its own book and removing it from my original file. I've done this to several sheets and each one, when I open the newly saved file, screws up my dates and reverts to some date 4 years ago, and not even the same day of the month. I ran into this problem a few years ago in a similar circumstance. Can I save my document, or have I lost my original date information? The orginal document is maintaining the correct dates. |
#2
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<Tools <Options <Calculation tab,
And check *OR* uncheck 1904 Date System. Which ever way give you the dates you want. -- HTH, RD ============================================== Please keep all correspondence within the Group, so all may benefit! ============================================== "DHT" wrote in message ... I have created a document with several sheets, tracking video tapes and their content, as well as date the tape was shot, etc. As projects are completed I am saving the sheet as its own book and removing it from my original file. I've done this to several sheets and each one, when I open the newly saved file, screws up my dates and reverts to some date 4 years ago, and not even the same day of the month. I ran into this problem a few years ago in a similar circumstance. Can I save my document, or have I lost my original date information? The orginal document is maintaining the correct dates. |
#3
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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. DHT wrote: I have created a document with several sheets, tracking video tapes and their content, as well as date the tape was shot, etc. As projects are completed I am saving the sheet as its own book and removing it from my original file. I've done this to several sheets and each one, when I open the newly saved file, screws up my dates and reverts to some date 4 years ago, and not even the same day of the month. I ran into this problem a few years ago in a similar circumstance. Can I save my document, or have I lost my original date information? The orginal document is maintaining the correct dates. -- Dave Peterson |
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