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Convert US date format to UK date format
Hi,
I have a system that exports all data into Excel in US date format (i.e. mm/dd/yy), but as my customers are using UK formatting I need to convert these dates to UK format (i.e. dd/mm/yy). Can anyone help me with a macro or formula to assist me converting these? There are SO many cells I need to convert doing it manually is not a feasible option. Thanks in advance, |
Convert US date format to UK date format
IF the date is being stored in Excel as a date, then select the column
and format it as DD/MM/YYYY and job is done. IF the information is being misinterpreted, then you would need to split out the day, year and month parts of the date and turn them back into a date serial in the correct order. |
Convert US date format to UK date format
Hi Louise,
As a complement : If Dat is your variable ... Format(DateSerial(Year(Dat), Month(Dat), Day(Dat)), "Short Date") HTH Cheers Carim |
Convert US date format to UK date format
Aidan is obviously entirely correct, but I thought I'd add a few bullets to
help out a bit as well: 1) One pretty quick way of checking whether Excel has recognised that the contents of a cell is in fact a date rather than a generic text string is to look at how the cell contents have been justified: by default, Excel left-justifies generic text, but normally right-justifies dates. However, if the cell justification has been set manually, then this simple check will obviously not tell you anything at all. 2) You can easily right-click on a cell to bring up the cell context menu, and then select the Format Cells... menu item. In the Format Cells dialogue, check the Category setting of the Number tab. If it says Date for the cells you're checking then you're lucky, and if it says General you've got a bit of work to do. 3) Of course, you can put together a VBA method that iterates over all cells of all sheets, and if the data entered in a particular cell looks like an American date ("mm/dd/yyyy") but due to some reason or another is not properly recognised as a date, you could let the macro patch it up. 4) However, if the people editing this workbook have indeed put US formatted dates into the worksheets, and if they were indeed using US settings, then everything should be all right. 5) Ideally, you should NOT try to change the date formats of cells manually -- let Excel handle it, and just make sure your users know that they are running the system with US or UK settings. In theory, everything should work transparently and no one should have to bother about changing date formats explicitly. Check your "Regional and Language Options" of your Windows system, select the Regional Settings tab, and make the necessary adjustments (English US or UK). It Should Just Work (tm) :-) Hope this helps, /MP " wrote: IF the date is being stored in Excel as a date, then select the column and format it as DD/MM/YYYY and job is done. IF the information is being misinterpreted, then you would need to split out the day, year and month parts of the date and turn them back into a date serial in the correct order. |
Convert US date format to UK date format
A good way of handling dates that may be in UK or US format is to make
the cells DD MMM YYYY format (or MMM DD YYYY as you see fit) which puts the month name into alpha format. Another thought I should mention is that I have many programs which extract dates from mainframe systems, and I ALWAYS pull in the dateserial of the day, month and year part of the date rather than relying on Excel to interpret the input. When items are input manually, then have the cell pre-formatted as a date, and also use data validation to ensure that they PUT dates - many users think that 01.01.01 is OK as a date! |
Convert US date format to UK date format
Make sure US date in column A is formatted as Text, then enter:
=DATE(RIGHT(A1,2)+2000,LEFT(A1,2),MID(A1,4,2)) HTH -- AP "Louise" a écrit dans le message de ... Hi, I have a system that exports all data into Excel in US date format (i.e. mm/dd/yy), but as my customers are using UK formatting I need to convert these dates to UK format (i.e. dd/mm/yy). Can anyone help me with a macro or formula to assist me converting these? There are SO many cells I need to convert doing it manually is not a feasible option. Thanks in advance, |
Convert US date format to UK date format
No need for the DateSerial function. Just use
Debug.Print Format(Now, "short date") "Carim" wrote in message oups.com... Hi Louise, As a complement : If Dat is your variable ... Format(DateSerial(Year(Dat), Month(Dat), Day(Dat)), "Short Date") HTH Cheers Carim |
Convert US date format to UK date format
(a) how does this help with the question asked, as NOW gives todays
date (b) in the original question, we may very well need date serial as this stops Excel mis-interpreting the date - I'm in the UK and I can promise you that from VBA Excel DELIGHTS in assuming I meant an American date if it could possibly interpret it that way - DateSerial stops that from happening! |
Convert US date format to UK date format
(a) how does this help with the question asked, as NOW gives todays
date (b) in the original question, we may very well need date serial as this stops Excel mis-interpreting the date - I'm in the UK and I can promise you that from VBA Excel DELIGHTS in assuming I meant an American date if it could possibly interpret it that way - DateSerial stops that from happening! |
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