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simserob

This Year
 

Hi, is there a way to program with the date function this year?

For example if I wanted to say something like "Days Past in this Year"
or something (sorry for the weak example), and I wanted to link
everything back to January 1st of this year, I would say
=today()-date(this year,1,1)

but how would you get it to work for this year, and so it would reset
itself every January 1st?


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simserob
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Trevor Shuttleworth

This Year
 
Something like:

=TODAY()-DATE(YEAR(TODAY()),1,1)

Regards

Trevor


"simserob" wrote in
message ...

Hi, is there a way to program with the date function this year?

For example if I wanted to say something like "Days Past in this Year"
or something (sorry for the weak example), and I wanted to link
everything back to January 1st of this year, I would say
=today()-date(this year,1,1)

but how would you get it to work for this year, and so it would reset
itself every January 1st?


--
simserob
------------------------------------------------------------------------
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http://www.excelforum.com/member.php...o&userid=36635
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VBA Noob

This Year
 

Sometime like

=TODAY()-DATE(YEAR(TODAY()),1,1)+1&" Days Past in this Year"

VBA Noob


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simserob

This Year
 

thanks a lot


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simserob
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simserob

This Year
 

btw, if you feel like it, i'd appreciate it if you explained what the
whole "DATE(YEAR(TODAY()),1,1)" is about, i don't really understand how
it's working and i just think it might help me in the future if i
understood the logic.

thanks again


--
simserob
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Trevor Shuttleworth

This Year
 
The easiest way to understand it is to build it up in separate cells, step
by step, so you can see what values you get.

=TODAY() gives you today's date, so right now, 20/08/2006 (dd/mm/yyy)
=YEAR(TODAY()) gives you the year from today's date, so 2006
=DATE(YEAR(TODAY()),1,1) gives a date value using this year, month 1 and day
1, that is, 01/01/2006

If you were to format the cell as General or as Number you'd see that this
is 38718, the number of days since 01/01/1900

The numeric value for Today's date is 38949.

Hence you can use those values to calculate the number of days between two
dates, etc.

Regards

Trevor


"simserob" wrote in
message ...

btw, if you feel like it, i'd appreciate it if you explained what the
whole "DATE(YEAR(TODAY()),1,1)" is about, i don't really understand how
it's working and i just think it might help me in the future if i
understood the logic.

thanks again


--
simserob
------------------------------------------------------------------------
simserob's Profile:
http://www.excelforum.com/member.php...o&userid=36635
View this thread: http://www.excelforum.com/showthread...hreadid=573452




simserob

This Year
 

i get it now
thanks a lot


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simserob
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