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Hi guys,
Firstly I apologise if something like this has already been covered but I have been unable to find anything related. I'm continuously adding to an ongoing spreadsheet with a range of data at work and have been trying to make the process a little easier/quicker. One of the data values is an ID number in the following format "AHPL-000#-####" where the AHPL and the 0's are constant and the #'s are variable numbers. Would anyone know how to make excell auto format cells like this? For example, would it be possible to simply type five numbers (corresponding to the #'s) and have it come out looking like the above? I've tried modifying an existing format under 'Custom' in the 'Format Cells' window and entered 'AHPL-000#-####' but an error occurs saying that Office Excel cannot use the number format you typed. Any help would be greatly appreciated. |
#2
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Try:
\A\HPL-\0\0\00-0000 or "AHPL-000"0-0000 Metafreak wrote: Hi guys, Firstly I apologise if something like this has already been covered but I have been unable to find anything related. I'm continuously adding to an ongoing spreadsheet with a range of data at work and have been trying to make the process a little easier/quicker. One of the data values is an ID number in the following format "AHPL-000#-####" where the AHPL and the 0's are constant and the #'s are variable numbers. Would anyone know how to make excell auto format cells like this? For example, would it be possible to simply type five numbers (corresponding to the #'s) and have it come out looking like the above? I've tried modifying an existing format under 'Custom' in the 'Format Cells' window and entered 'AHPL-000#-####' but an error occurs saying that Office Excel cannot use the number format you typed. Any help would be greatly appreciated. -- Dave Peterson |
#3
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Wow, thanks for such a prompt reply. Unfortunately this doesn't seem to
work. I tried both examples and the result is a line of ######### in the cell. Just to reiterate, would it be possible to program excel in such a way that if I were to type for example 47213 or 4-7213, excel would automatically format it to AHPL-0004-7213? "Dave Peterson" wrote: Try: \A\HPL-\0\0\00-0000 or "AHPL-000"0-0000 Metafreak wrote: Hi guys, Firstly I apologise if something like this has already been covered but I have been unable to find anything related. I'm continuously adding to an ongoing spreadsheet with a range of data at work and have been trying to make the process a little easier/quicker. One of the data values is an ID number in the following format "AHPL-000#-####" where the AHPL and the 0's are constant and the #'s are variable numbers. Would anyone know how to make excell auto format cells like this? For example, would it be possible to simply type five numbers (corresponding to the #'s) and have it come out looking like the above? I've tried modifying an existing format under 'Custom' in the 'Format Cells' window and entered 'AHPL-000#-####' but an error occurs saying that Office Excel cannot use the number format you typed. Any help would be greatly appreciated. -- Dave Peterson |
#4
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Dave answered your question; you don't need to reiterate it. #s mean that
your cell is not wide enough to display the result. Widen the column -- that should solve your problem. Regards, Fred. "Metafreak" wrote in message ... Wow, thanks for such a prompt reply. Unfortunately this doesn't seem to work. I tried both examples and the result is a line of ######### in the cell. Just to reiterate, would it be possible to program excel in such a way that if I were to type for example 47213 or 4-7213, excel would automatically format it to AHPL-0004-7213? "Dave Peterson" wrote: Try: \A\HPL-\0\0\00-0000 or "AHPL-000"0-0000 Metafreak wrote: Hi guys, Firstly I apologise if something like this has already been covered but I have been unable to find anything related. I'm continuously adding to an ongoing spreadsheet with a range of data at work and have been trying to make the process a little easier/quicker. One of the data values is an ID number in the following format "AHPL-000#-####" where the AHPL and the 0's are constant and the #'s are variable numbers. Would anyone know how to make excell auto format cells like this? For example, would it be possible to simply type five numbers (corresponding to the #'s) and have it come out looking like the above? I've tried modifying an existing format under 'Custom' in the 'Format Cells' window and entered 'AHPL-000#-####' but an error occurs saying that Office Excel cannot use the number format you typed. Any help would be greatly appreciated. -- Dave Peterson |
#5
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Ahh, great. It indeed worked like a charm.
Thanks for the help guys. "Fred Smith" wrote: Dave answered your question; you don't need to reiterate it. #s mean that your cell is not wide enough to display the result. Widen the column -- that should solve your problem. Regards, Fred. "Metafreak" wrote in message ... Wow, thanks for such a prompt reply. Unfortunately this doesn't seem to work. I tried both examples and the result is a line of ######### in the cell. Just to reiterate, would it be possible to program excel in such a way that if I were to type for example 47213 or 4-7213, excel would automatically format it to AHPL-0004-7213? "Dave Peterson" wrote: Try: \A\HPL-\0\0\00-0000 or "AHPL-000"0-0000 Metafreak wrote: Hi guys, Firstly I apologise if something like this has already been covered but I have been unable to find anything related. I'm continuously adding to an ongoing spreadsheet with a range of data at work and have been trying to make the process a little easier/quicker. One of the data values is an ID number in the following format "AHPL-000#-####" where the AHPL and the 0's are constant and the #'s are variable numbers. Would anyone know how to make excell auto format cells like this? For example, would it be possible to simply type five numbers (corresponding to the #'s) and have it come out looking like the above? I've tried modifying an existing format under 'Custom' in the 'Format Cells' window and entered 'AHPL-000#-####' but an error occurs saying that Office Excel cannot use the number format you typed. Any help would be greatly appreciated. -- Dave Peterson |
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