![]() |
In excel 2000, IF function calculates incorrectly using "E"
Using E for zero. =IF(C2="E",(O2),(O2)) does not calculate correctly. Substituting a zero, formula will work OK. Using #'s all is OK.
Can I write a formula using "E". When I use zero's I have to have them show in places were I don't want them to show. |
In excel 2000, IF function calculates incorrectly using "E"
Using E for zero. =IF(C2="E",(O2),(O2)) does not calculate correctly.
Substituting a zero, formula will work OK. Using #'s all is OK. Can I write a formula using "E". When I use zero's I have to have them show in places were I don't want them to show. So.., is the content of C2 E, empty, or zero? (Your formula expects a text value!) -- Garry Free usenet access at http://www.eternal-september.org Classic VB Users Regroup! comp.lang.basic.visual.misc microsoft.public.vb.general.discussion |
In excel 2000, IF function calculates incorrectly using "E"
On Saturday, 29 April 2017 04:34:38 UTC+10, wrote:
Using E for zero. =IF(C2="E",(O2),(O2)) does not calculate correctly. Substituting a zero, formula will work OK. Using #'s all is OK. Can I write a formula using "E". When I use zero's I have to have them show in places were I don't want them to show. Your formula says to choose O2 with true or false, how can you tell if it's working? I just tried it in Excel 2013 and initially had the same problem but then realised I didn't have the E in C2.. Change your formula to choose a different result cell for true/false Ron |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 10:05 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
ExcelBanter.com