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#1
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I am using Office XP and I was wondering how to delete duplicates. Is there
a procedure in Excel where I can do this in one key stroke? My list consists of 14,000 lines, so as you can see it would be quite cumbersome to go through manually to delete them. Any help would be greatly appreciated. |
#2
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In an adjacent column, add this formula
=If(COUNTIF($A$1:A1,A1)1,"Dup","") and copy down Then filter column B and select a value of Dup. Delete all visible rows. -- HTH RP (remove nothere from the email address if mailing direct) "naminel" wrote in message ... I am using Office XP and I was wondering how to delete duplicates. Is there a procedure in Excel where I can do this in one key stroke? My list consists of 14,000 lines, so as you can see it would be quite cumbersome to go through manually to delete them. Any help would be greatly appreciated. |
#3
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![]() Thank you much. It worked. "Bob Phillips" wrote: In an adjacent column, add this formula =If(COUNTIF($A$1:A1,A1)1,"Dup","") and copy down Then filter column B and select a value of Dup. Delete all visible rows. -- HTH RP (remove nothere from the email address if mailing direct) "naminel" wrote in message ... I am using Office XP and I was wondering how to delete duplicates. Is there a procedure in Excel where I can do this in one key stroke? My list consists of 14,000 lines, so as you can see it would be quite cumbersome to go through manually to delete them. Any help would be greatly appreciated. |
#4
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I tried the same, or almost so, and I must have done something wrong. It has
been a while since I have fooled with this type of thing. I want to see if col B is the same, and changed the formula to =IF(COUNTIF($B$1:B1,B1)1,"Dup","") Dup is appearing, but in the row after the second occurance. thanks for any help, judy "naminel" wrote: Thank you much. It worked. "Bob Phillips" wrote: In an adjacent column, add this formula =If(COUNTIF($A$1:A1,A1)1,"Dup","") and copy down Then filter column B and select a value of Dup. Delete all visible rows. -- HTH RP (remove nothere from the email address if mailing direct) "naminel" wrote in message ... I am using Office XP and I was wondering how to delete duplicates. Is there a procedure in Excel where I can do this in one key stroke? My list consists of 14,000 lines, so as you can see it would be quite cumbersome to go through manually to delete them. Any help would be greatly appreciated. |
#5
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Bob,
I tried this with no luck, do not know what i did wrong. I put formula in the adjecent colum at the end of my report area and copied it down. After that I do not know what you mean by select a value of dup. Please advise, JC "Bob Phillips" wrote: In an adjacent column, add this formula =If(COUNTIF($A$1:A1,A1)1,"Dup","") and copy down Then filter column B and select a value of Dup. Delete all visible rows. -- HTH RP (remove nothere from the email address if mailing direct) "naminel" wrote in message ... I am using Office XP and I was wondering how to delete duplicates. Is there a procedure in Excel where I can do this in one key stroke? My list consists of 14,000 lines, so as you can see it would be quite cumbersome to go through manually to delete them. Any help would be greatly appreciated. |
#6
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Bob,
I have more than 120,000 lines to process. Is there a faster way than doing the formula, copying down, filtering 'dup' and deleting? Appreciate your time. =IF(COUNTIF($A$2:A207,A207)1,"DUP","") Thanks, Anna "JC" wrote: Bob, I tried this with no luck, do not know what i did wrong. I put formula in the adjecent colum at the end of my report area and copied it down. After that I do not know what you mean by select a value of dup. Please advise, JC "Bob Phillips" wrote: In an adjacent column, add this formula =If(COUNTIF($A$1:A1,A1)1,"Dup","") and copy down Then filter column B and select a value of Dup. Delete all visible rows. -- HTH RP (remove nothere from the email address if mailing direct) "naminel" wrote in message ... I am using Office XP and I was wondering how to delete duplicates. Is there a procedure in Excel where I can do this in one key stroke? My list consists of 14,000 lines, so as you can see it would be quite cumbersome to go through manually to delete them. Any help would be greatly appreciated. |
#7
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If you have more than 120,000 rows in one sheet than you must have Excel
2007, under the data tab in the data tools section you can apply a function called "Remove Duplicates" If you don't have Excel 2007 then you need portion out these rows then applying this formula and filtering on "Dup" then deleting the visible rows shouldn't take that long. There are add-ins like ASAP Utilities that you can install which has this built in -- Regards, Peo Sjoblom "Anna" wrote in message ... Bob, I have more than 120,000 lines to process. Is there a faster way than doing the formula, copying down, filtering 'dup' and deleting? Appreciate your time. =IF(COUNTIF($A$2:A207,A207)1,"DUP","") Thanks, Anna "JC" wrote: Bob, I tried this with no luck, do not know what i did wrong. I put formula in the adjecent colum at the end of my report area and copied it down. After that I do not know what you mean by select a value of dup. Please advise, JC "Bob Phillips" wrote: In an adjacent column, add this formula =If(COUNTIF($A$1:A1,A1)1,"Dup","") and copy down Then filter column B and select a value of Dup. Delete all visible rows. -- HTH RP (remove nothere from the email address if mailing direct) "naminel" wrote in message ... I am using Office XP and I was wondering how to delete duplicates. Is there a procedure in Excel where I can do this in one key stroke? My list consists of 14,000 lines, so as you can see it would be quite cumbersome to go through manually to delete them. Any help would be greatly appreciated. |
#8
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Peo,
Thanks. The 120,000 is from 2 files. I was working on the first file for abt an hour, copying the countif formula down and my system crashed. I lost everything I worked on and had to start all over :( I also tried doing advanced filter but the file is too big and it hanged each time I tried it. Anna "Peo Sjoblom" wrote: If you have more than 120,000 rows in one sheet than you must have Excel 2007, under the data tab in the data tools section you can apply a function called "Remove Duplicates" If you don't have Excel 2007 then you need portion out these rows then applying this formula and filtering on "Dup" then deleting the visible rows shouldn't take that long. There are add-ins like ASAP Utilities that you can install which has this built in -- Regards, Peo Sjoblom "Anna" wrote in message ... Bob, I have more than 120,000 lines to process. Is there a faster way than doing the formula, copying down, filtering 'dup' and deleting? Appreciate your time. =IF(COUNTIF($A$2:A207,A207)1,"DUP","") Thanks, Anna "JC" wrote: Bob, I tried this with no luck, do not know what i did wrong. I put formula in the adjecent colum at the end of my report area and copied it down. After that I do not know what you mean by select a value of dup. Please advise, JC "Bob Phillips" wrote: In an adjacent column, add this formula =If(COUNTIF($A$1:A1,A1)1,"Dup","") and copy down Then filter column B and select a value of Dup. Delete all visible rows. -- HTH RP (remove nothere from the email address if mailing direct) "naminel" wrote in message ... I am using Office XP and I was wondering how to delete duplicates. Is there a procedure in Excel where I can do this in one key stroke? My list consists of 14,000 lines, so as you can see it would be quite cumbersome to go through manually to delete them. Any help would be greatly appreciated. |
#9
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I have exported Outlook Contacts and want to delete the duplicates, but each
duplicate entry (or row) isn't exactly the same. I would like to filter and find the duplicates by 2 columns - then once identified, ask Excel to delete the record with less information. Is that possible? "Bob Phillips" wrote: In an adjacent column, add this formula =If(COUNTIF($A$1:A1,A1)1,"Dup","") and copy down Then filter column B and select a value of Dup. Delete all visible rows. -- HTH RP (remove nothere from the email address if mailing direct) "naminel" wrote in message ... I am using Office XP and I was wondering how to delete duplicates. Is there a procedure in Excel where I can do this in one key stroke? My list consists of 14,000 lines, so as you can see it would be quite cumbersome to go through manually to delete them. Any help would be greatly appreciated. |
#10
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In Excel 2007, I have 2 columns: A contains names, B contains Permissions;
this data was pulled from my database. what I'm trying to do is remove duplicate names in "A", or replace them with a blank cell, and not disturb "B". Using the "Remove Duplicates" function, it does part of what I need, but skews the data corrolation. Example Befo A B jdoe Testing jdoe Accounting jdoe Inventory dmark Telephony dmark Inventory scuba Inventory scuba Finance AFTER: A B jdoe Testing dmark Accounting scuba Inventory Telephony Inventory Inventory Finance what I WANT to see: A B jdoe Testing Accounting Inventory dmark Telephony Inventory scuba Inventory Finance "Peo Sjoblom" wrote: ... under the data tab in the data tools section you can apply a function called "Remove Duplicates" .... -- Regards, Peo Sjoblom |
#11
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Rogan68 wrote:
In Excel 2007, I have 2 columns: A contains names, B contains Permissions; this data was pulled from my database. what I'm trying to do is remove duplicate names in "A", or replace them with a blank cell, and not disturb "B". Using the "Remove Duplicates" function, it does part of what I need, but skews the data corrolation. Example Befo A B jdoe Testing jdoe Accounting jdoe Inventory dmark Telephony dmark Inventory scuba Inventory scuba Finance AFTER: A B jdoe Testing dmark Accounting scuba Inventory Telephony Inventory Inventory Finance what I WANT to see: A B jdoe Testing Accounting Inventory dmark Telephony Inventory scuba Inventory Finance If this is just for display purposes, use conditional formatting to change the text to match the background color (usually white) in rows where the value above is the same. Select your data in Column A starting from A2. Select FORMAT / CONDITIONAL FORMATTING. Next to "Cell value is" select "equal to" and then put =A1 in the box to the right. Select "Format..." and on the font tab for "Color:" select white (or whatever your background color is for the cells). Click "OK" twice. |
#12
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Thanks, Glenn. I'll give that a whirl. :)
"Glenn" wrote: If this is just for display purposes, use conditional formatting to change the text to match the background color (usually white) in rows where the value above is the same. Select your data in Column A starting from A2. Select FORMAT / CONDITIONAL FORMATTING. Next to "Cell value is" select "equal to" and then put =A1 in the box to the right. Select "Format..." and on the font tab for "Color:" select white (or whatever your background color is for the cells). Click "OK" twice. |
#13
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Bob,
This was very helpful for me. Thank you for sharing. |
#14
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"Bob Phillips" wrote:
In an adjacent column, add this formula =If(COUNTIF($A$1:A1,A1)1,"Dup","") and copy down Then filter column B and select a value of Dup. Delete all visible rows. Bob, You're a life-saver. I was trying to match different file types associated with different portions of my database to see which were accessed in a specific screen of the interface. Unfortunately, the database just posts what all files WERE accessed with no apparent sort (by time it was accessed nor even sorting alphabetically). I took the list of files accessed before (Column B) and after (Column A). Using your formula with very slight modifications in Column C: =IF(COUNTIF($A$1:B123,A1)1,"Dup","") I was able to see what was accessed after going to the screen. I then wanted to be certain nothing was purged after going to the second screen by, again, modifying your formula in Column D: =IF(COUNTIF($A$1:$B123,B1)1,"Dup","") As I expected, I didn't see anything that wasn't a duplicate. I believe these formulas are accurate, but I'm obviously not as good as you are. Either way, it found me what I wanted. Thank you! |
#15
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![]() "Bob Phillips" wrote: In an adjacent column, add this formula =If(COUNTIF($A$1:A1,A1)1,"Dup","") and copy down Then filter column B and select a value of Dup. Delete all visible rows. -- Hi Bob, Thanks to this...its a huge help...however, when i tried to delete all the Dups...there are no more remaining for that dup data...it means my count are inaccurate because the dups are gone without a trace at of atleast one to count...can you advise me..how to maintain one of those dups to have a complete count? |
#16
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Try Bob's formula once more and remember his formula goes in row 1 of that
helper column. But before you delete any rows, look at your data. I bet you'll see that the formula Bob suggested only put "Dup" on the second, third, ... cell with that data. If you see something different, then either your data isn't what you think it is--or you used a different formula. If the values looked ok, then it must have been the way you did the deleting. Try this: Apply the filter to show the Dup's. Select the visible cells in that column. Now hit F5 (or ctrl-g) (same as Edit|goto in xl2003 menus). Click the Special button Select visible cells only Then rightclick on one of the still selected cells and choose Delete... Then entire row. =========== My bet is that you're using xl2007 and if you're not careful, you'll delete all the cells--not just the visible cells. This behavior is different from previous versions--and only occurs under certain circumstances. Eve wrote: "Bob Phillips" wrote: In an adjacent column, add this formula =If(COUNTIF($A$1:A1,A1)1,"Dup","") and copy down Then filter column B and select a value of Dup. Delete all visible rows. -- Hi Bob, Thanks to this...its a huge help...however, when i tried to delete all the Dups...there are no more remaining for that dup data...it means my count are inaccurate because the dups are gone without a trace at of atleast one to count...can you advise me..how to maintain one of those dups to have a complete count? -- Dave Peterson |
#17
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Is there a way that Excel can look at a date base (with values) and ID all
duplicates as a value? Let's say there is a value of 102 in the DB and it shows up 7 times. I want this value in a sepertae column. Thanks Larry "Eve" wrote: "Bob Phillips" wrote: In an adjacent column, add this formula =If(COUNTIF($A$1:A1,A1)1,"Dup","") and copy down Then filter column B and select a value of Dup. Delete all visible rows. -- Hi Bob, Thanks to this...its a huge help...however, when i tried to delete all the Dups...there are no more remaining for that dup data...it means my count are inaccurate because the dups are gone without a trace at of atleast one to count...can you advise me..how to maintain one of those dups to have a complete count? |
#18
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Judy, Bob's advice requires a little bit of tweaking. Run his if statement,
then select the column where you marked the dupes. Copy, then paste special preserving values. Now, go back and manually select all the data except for row 1. Cut, then paste up one row. Do a visual scan to confirm that the workaround was successful, then delete all filtered items as before. "judyb" wrote: I tried the same, or almost so, and I must have done something wrong. It has been a while since I have fooled with this type of thing. I want to see if col B is the same, and changed the formula to =IF(COUNTIF($B$1:B1,B1)1,"Dup","") Dup is appearing, but in the row after the second occurance. thanks for any help, judy "naminel" wrote: Thank you much. It worked. "Bob Phillips" wrote: In an adjacent column, add this formula =If(COUNTIF($A$1:A1,A1)1,"Dup","") and copy down Then filter column B and select a value of Dup. Delete all visible rows. -- HTH RP (remove nothere from the email address if mailing direct) "naminel" wrote in message ... I am using Office XP and I was wondering how to delete duplicates. Is there a procedure in Excel where I can do this in one key stroke? My list consists of 14,000 lines, so as you can see it would be quite cumbersome to go through manually to delete them. Any help would be greatly appreciated. |
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