Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.worksheet.functions
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Hi. My problem is that I import a table with a number of columns (using "New web query"), one of which (D) is a column of dates in the form "08 July 2007" (two spaces between the number and month as it happens). In Import External Data - Options I am forced to select Disable Date Recognition due to the content of another of the columns which is misread otherwise. Once the table is imported into the worksheet I need to get Excel (2003) to recognise the date column (i.e. D) as dates, which it refuses to do even if I select the column and Format - Cells... - Date it, or correct the two spaces into the next column using =LEFT(D1,2)&RIGHT(D1,LEN(D1)-3) and then formatting that column using Format - Cell - Date. Excel will recognise the individual D cells as dates if I click the cursor in each one first but this is not a feasible solution since the column of dates is very long. I'd be grateful if anyone knows a solution. My suspicion is that there isn't one. Regards Chandler |
#2
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.worksheet.functions
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Try Data Text to Columns. There's a step 3 in the wizard where you can
configure it to help Excel recognize the source date format. Select the col of "dates", click Data Text to Columns. Click Next Next. In step 3, under Column data format check "Date", then select: DMY from the droplist. Click Finish. -- Max Singapore http://savefile.com/projects/236895 xdemechanik --- "Chandler" wrote: Hi. My problem is that I import a table with a number of columns (using "New web query"), one of which (D) is a column of dates in the form "08 July 2007" (two spaces between the number and month as it happens). In Import External Data - Options I am forced to select Disable Date Recognition due to the content of another of the columns which is misread otherwise. Once the table is imported into the worksheet I need to get Excel (2003) to recognise the date column (i.e. D) as dates, which it refuses to do even if I select the column and Format - Cells... - Date it, or correct the two spaces into the next column using =LEFT(D1,2)&RIGHT(D1,LEN(D1)-3) and then formatting that column using Format - Cell - Date. Excel will recognise the individual D cells as dates if I click the cursor in each one first but this is not a feasible solution since the column of dates is very long. I'd be grateful if anyone knows a solution. My suspicion is that there isn't one. Regards Chandler |
#4
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.worksheet.functions
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
TTC (Text To Columns) should convert that data to XL recognizable dates
quite easily, just by opening and closing TTC. Select the column of imported dates, then click: <Data <Text To Columns <Finish And you should now have a column of XL "legal" dates. -- HTH, RD --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Please keep all correspondence within the NewsGroup, so all may benefit ! --------------------------------------------------------------------------- "Chandler" wrote in message ... Hi. My problem is that I import a table with a number of columns (using "New web query"), one of which (D) is a column of dates in the form "08 July 2007" (two spaces between the number and month as it happens). In Import External Data - Options I am forced to select Disable Date Recognition due to the content of another of the columns which is misread otherwise. Once the table is imported into the worksheet I need to get Excel (2003) to recognise the date column (i.e. D) as dates, which it refuses to do even if I select the column and Format - Cells... - Date it, or correct the two spaces into the next column using =LEFT(D1,2)&RIGHT(D1,LEN(D1)-3) and then formatting that column using Format - Cell - Date. Excel will recognise the individual D cells as dates if I click the cursor in each one first but this is not a feasible solution since the column of dates is very long. I'd be grateful if anyone knows a solution. My suspicion is that there isn't one. Regards Chandler |
#5
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.worksheet.functions
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Thanks to all. Very helpful
Chandler "Ragdyer" wrote: TTC (Text To Columns) should convert that data to XL recognizable dates quite easily, just by opening and closing TTC. Select the column of imported dates, then click: <Data <Text To Columns <Finish And you should now have a column of XL "legal" dates. -- HTH, RD --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Please keep all correspondence within the NewsGroup, so all may benefit ! --------------------------------------------------------------------------- "Chandler" wrote in message ... Hi. My problem is that I import a table with a number of columns (using "New web query"), one of which (D) is a column of dates in the form "08 July 2007" (two spaces between the number and month as it happens). In Import External Data - Options I am forced to select Disable Date Recognition due to the content of another of the columns which is misread otherwise. Once the table is imported into the worksheet I need to get Excel (2003) to recognise the date column (i.e. D) as dates, which it refuses to do even if I select the column and Format - Cells... - Date it, or correct the two spaces into the next column using =LEFT(D1,2)&RIGHT(D1,LEN(D1)-3) and then formatting that column using Format - Cell - Date. Excel will recognise the individual D cells as dates if I click the cursor in each one first but this is not a feasible solution since the column of dates is very long. I'd be grateful if anyone knows a solution. My suspicion is that there isn't one. Regards Chandler |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Disable Date Recognition | Excel Discussion (Misc queries) | |||
problem of recognition of numbers in Excel | Excel Discussion (Misc queries) | |||
Sum function based on Date recognition | Excel Discussion (Misc queries) | |||
Disable Date Recognition | Excel Discussion (Misc queries) | |||
Disable Date Recognition? | Excel Discussion (Misc queries) |