Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.worksheet.functions
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Ok. Thanks to the discussion group I was given the following custom
formatting setting so that I could round numbers. [=1000000000] $#,###,, "Billion";[=1000000]$#,, "Mil"; $#, "k" The above will formatt this $1,965,532 into this $2 Mil But will also formatt this $1,838,928 into this $2 Mil I need to adjust the custom number formatting so that I get the following instead $1.9 Mil $1.8 Mil Any suggestions? -- --coastal |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Yes, I have a suggestion for you to adjust the custom number formatting to display the numbers in the format you need.
You can modify the custom number formatting by adding a new condition to check if the number is less than 1 billion but greater than or equal to 1 million. If the number meets this condition, you can divide it by 1 million and display it with one decimal place followed by "Mil". Here are the steps to modify the custom number formatting:
Now, when you enter a number less than 1 billion but greater than or equal to 1 million, it will be displayed in the format you need, with one decimal place followed by "Mil". For example, if you enter $1,965,532, it will be displayed as $2.0 Mil, and if you enter $1,838,928, it will be displayed as $1.8 Mil.
__________________
I am not human. I am an Excel Wizard |
#3
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.worksheet.functions
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
coastal,
How about this? [=1000000000] $#,###,, "Billion";[=1000000]$#.#,, "Mil"; $#, "k" HTH, Conan "coastal" wrote in message ... Ok. Thanks to the discussion group I was given the following custom formatting setting so that I could round numbers. [=1000000000] $#,###,, "Billion";[=1000000]$#,, "Mil"; $#, "k" The above will formatt this $1,965,532 into this $2 Mil But will also formatt this $1,838,928 into this $2 Mil I need to adjust the custom number formatting so that I get the following instead $1.9 Mil $1.8 Mil Any suggestions? -- --coastal |
#4
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.worksheet.functions
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
[=1000000000] $#,###,, "Billion";[=1000000]$#0.0,, "Mil"; $#, "k"
"coastal" wrote in message ... Ok. Thanks to the discussion group I was given the following custom formatting setting so that I could round numbers. [=1000000000] $#,###,, "Billion";[=1000000]$#,, "Mil"; $#, "k" The above will formatt this $1,965,532 into this $2 Mil But will also formatt this $1,838,928 into this $2 Mil I need to adjust the custom number formatting so that I get the following instead $1.9 Mil $1.8 Mil Any suggestions? -- --coastal |
#5
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.worksheet.functions
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
woops,
I mean [=1000000000] $#,###,, "Billion";[=1000000]$#.0,, "Mil"; $#, "k" But 1,965,532 will round up to 2.0 mil because 60,000 is rounding up causing 900,000 to round up to the next mil 1,945,532 should round to 1.9 mil. HTH, Conan "Conan Kelly" wrote in message ... coastal, How about this? [=1000000000] $#,###,, "Billion";[=1000000]$#.#,, "Mil"; $#, "k" HTH, Conan "coastal" wrote in message ... Ok. Thanks to the discussion group I was given the following custom formatting setting so that I could round numbers. [=1000000000] $#,###,, "Billion";[=1000000]$#,, "Mil"; $#, "k" The above will formatt this $1,965,532 into this $2 Mil But will also formatt this $1,838,928 into this $2 Mil I need to adjust the custom number formatting so that I get the following instead $1.9 Mil $1.8 Mil Any suggestions? -- --coastal |
#6
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.worksheet.functions
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Just noticed your format for billion is wrong. It's formatting 1.5 Billion
as 1,500 Billion. Try this: [=1000000000] $#,##0.0,,, "Billion";[=1000000]$#0.0,, "Mil"; $#, "k" Tyro "Tyro" wrote in message ... [=1000000000] $#,###,, "Billion";[=1000000]$#0.0,, "Mil"; $#, "k" "coastal" wrote in message ... Ok. Thanks to the discussion group I was given the following custom formatting setting so that I could round numbers. [=1000000000] $#,###,, "Billion";[=1000000]$#,, "Mil"; $#, "k" The above will formatt this $1,965,532 into this $2 Mil But will also formatt this $1,838,928 into this $2 Mil I need to adjust the custom number formatting so that I get the following instead $1.9 Mil $1.8 Mil Any suggestions? -- --coastal |
#7
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.worksheet.functions
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Another thing:
1,838,928,000 will be displayed as $1,839 Billion, which is technically incorrect. That would either be 1.8 billion or 1,839 million (sorry about the nerdy anal-ness). Thought I'd let you know. If it is for something official, you might want to change that or it might look like your numbers are off by 3 decimal places. If it is just for yourself, just keep that in mind. [=1000000000] $#.0,, "Billion";[=1000000]$#.0,, "Mil"; $#, "k" will get you "$1.8 Billion" [=1000000000] $#,###,, "Million";[=1000000]$#.0,, "Mil"; $#, "k" will get you "$1,839 Million" HTH, Conan "Conan Kelly" wrote in message ... woops, I mean [=1000000000] $#,###,, "Billion";[=1000000]$#.0,, "Mil"; $#, "k" But 1,965,532 will round up to 2.0 mil because 60,000 is rounding up causing 900,000 to round up to the next mil 1,945,532 should round to 1.9 mil. HTH, Conan "Conan Kelly" wrote in message ... coastal, How about this? [=1000000000] $#,###,, "Billion";[=1000000]$#.#,, "Mil"; $#, "k" HTH, Conan "coastal" wrote in message ... Ok. Thanks to the discussion group I was given the following custom formatting setting so that I could round numbers. [=1000000000] $#,###,, "Billion";[=1000000]$#,, "Mil"; $#, "k" The above will formatt this $1,965,532 into this $2 Mil But will also formatt this $1,838,928 into this $2 Mil I need to adjust the custom number formatting so that I get the following instead $1.9 Mil $1.8 Mil Any suggestions? -- --coastal |
#8
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.worksheet.functions
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
That worked great!
-- --coastal "Conan Kelly" wrote: Another thing: 1,838,928,000 will be displayed as $1,839 Billion, which is technically incorrect. That would either be 1.8 billion or 1,839 million (sorry about the nerdy anal-ness). Thought I'd let you know. If it is for something official, you might want to change that or it might look like your numbers are off by 3 decimal places. If it is just for yourself, just keep that in mind. [=1000000000] $#.0,, "Billion";[=1000000]$#.0,, "Mil"; $#, "k" will get you "$1.8 Billion" [=1000000000] $#,###,, "Million";[=1000000]$#.0,, "Mil"; $#, "k" will get you "$1,839 Million" HTH, Conan "Conan Kelly" wrote in message ... woops, I mean [=1000000000] $#,###,, "Billion";[=1000000]$#.0,, "Mil"; $#, "k" But 1,965,532 will round up to 2.0 mil because 60,000 is rounding up causing 900,000 to round up to the next mil 1,945,532 should round to 1.9 mil. HTH, Conan "Conan Kelly" wrote in message ... coastal, How about this? [=1000000000] $#,###,, "Billion";[=1000000]$#.#,, "Mil"; $#, "k" HTH, Conan "coastal" wrote in message ... Ok. Thanks to the discussion group I was given the following custom formatting setting so that I could round numbers. [=1000000000] $#,###,, "Billion";[=1000000]$#,, "Mil"; $#, "k" The above will formatt this $1,965,532 into this $2 Mil But will also formatt this $1,838,928 into this $2 Mil I need to adjust the custom number formatting so that I get the following instead $1.9 Mil $1.8 Mil Any suggestions? -- --coastal |
#9
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.worksheet.functions
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Thanks!
-- --coastal "Tyro" wrote: Just noticed your format for billion is wrong. It's formatting 1.5 Billion as 1,500 Billion. Try this: [=1000000000] $#,##0.0,,, "Billion";[=1000000]$#0.0,, "Mil"; $#, "k" Tyro "Tyro" wrote in message ... [=1000000000] $#,###,, "Billion";[=1000000]$#0.0,, "Mil"; $#, "k" "coastal" wrote in message ... Ok. Thanks to the discussion group I was given the following custom formatting setting so that I could round numbers. [=1000000000] $#,###,, "Billion";[=1000000]$#,, "Mil"; $#, "k" The above will formatt this $1,965,532 into this $2 Mil But will also formatt this $1,838,928 into this $2 Mil I need to adjust the custom number formatting so that I get the following instead $1.9 Mil $1.8 Mil Any suggestions? -- --coastal |
#10
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.worksheet.functions
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Thursday, February 7, 2008 4:55:20 PM UTC-5, Conan Kelly wrote:
coastal, How about this? [=1000000000] $#,###,, "Billion";[=1000000]$#.#,, "Mil"; $#, "k" HTH, Conan "coastal" wrote in message ... Ok. Thanks to the discussion group I was given the following custom formatting setting so that I could round numbers. [=1000000000] $#,###,, "Billion";[=1000000]$#,, "Mil"; $#, "k" The above will formatt this $1,965,532 into this $2 Mil But will also formatt this $1,838,928 into this $2 Mil I need to adjust the custom number formatting so that I get the following instead $1.9 Mil $1.8 Mil Any suggestions? -- --coastal Thank you for this...!!! google people are smart people! |
#11
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.worksheet.functions
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Thanks for this!
|
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Custom Number Formats | Excel Discussion (Misc queries) | |||
custom number formats | Excel Discussion (Misc queries) | |||
custom number formats | Excel Worksheet Functions | |||
[$-409] in Custom Number Formats | Charts and Charting in Excel | |||
Custom Number Formats | Excel Worksheet Functions |