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Excel uses numbers to represent dates. Jan. 1, 1900 is day 1, Jan 2, 1900 is
day 2. Jan 1, 1950 is day 18,264. Jan 1 2008 is day 39,448. Today, Feb 1, 2008 is day 39,479. A fast way to see the number for a date is to enter the date in a cell then press Ctrl+Accent Grave - the leftmost key in the top row. Press Ctrl+Accent Grave again to return to normal. Excel uses the numbers 1 (Jan 1, 1900) through 2,958,465 (Dec. 31, 9999) to represent dates. So you can see the problem. Is a number a number or a date? It depends on how you interpret it. You can use those numbers for calculations or format them as dates. Tyro "msnews.microsoft.com" wrote in message ... Can anyone advise how to count the number of cells containing dates in the range A1:A1000. Is there a condition I can use in COUNTIF? If it helps, the dates are customer formatted as dd.mm.yy Many thanks, Jason |
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