Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#5
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.misc
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Simply formatting the cells as Number or General is not sufficient if Excel
believes they are text. Select an empty cell formatted as Number and EditCopy. Select your range of data and Paste SpecialAddOKEsc to coerce the data to Numbers. Gord Dibben MS Excel MVP On Thu, 6 Apr 2006 06:36:44 -0500, alisyed wrote: I'm using a simple vlookup. The values I want results for (on the very left of my array) apparently do not have the same format as the ones I am looking up. If I want them to produce a result, I have to copy and paste as a value in the array and only then will my vlookup will work. It's not a formatting issue - because I've checked formats and they're both General. Is there a way to make them comparable? Any help would be greatly appreciated. Gord Dibben MS Excel MVP |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
VLOOKUP Problem | Excel Discussion (Misc queries) | |||
Using single cell reference as table array argument in Vlookup | Excel Worksheet Functions | |||
VLOOKUP Limitations | Excel Worksheet Functions | |||
Have Vlookup return a Value of 0 instead of #N/A | Excel Worksheet Functions | |||
vlookup data hidden within worksheet | Excel Worksheet Functions |