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#1
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Formulas appear in cell instead of formula result
I am trying to combine data from multiple cells on one worksheet in a single
cell on a second worksheet using "concatenate". I enter =CONCATENATE('IT Project Info'!C10,'IT Project Info'!C11,'IT Project Info'!C12,'IT Project Info'!C13) in the target destination cell and hit "enter". The function statement stays in the cell, however, instead of the result. I have tried concatenating information from cells on the same worksheet as a test with the same result. Thanks, Tom |
#2
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Hi
check the format of this cell ('Format - Cell'). If it is 'Text' change the format to 'General' and re-enter your formula -- Regards Frank Kabel Frankfurt, Germany "tommcbrny" schrieb im Newsbeitrag ... I am trying to combine data from multiple cells on one worksheet in a single cell on a second worksheet using "concatenate". I enter =CONCATENATE('IT Project Info'!C10,'IT Project Info'!C11,'IT Project Info'!C12,'IT Project Info'!C13) in the target destination cell and hit "enter". The function statement stays in the cell, however, instead of the result. I have tried concatenating information from cells on the same worksheet as a test with the same result. Thanks, Tom |
#3
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I never use CONCATENATE because it does funny things. Try using & instead:
='IT Project Info'!C10&'IT Project Info'!C11&'IT Project Info'!C12&'IT Project Info'!C13 and see if you get better results. I'm pretty positive the ampersand will concatenate regardless of the data type (even mixed types). Good luck! "tommcbrny" wrote: I am trying to combine data from multiple cells on one worksheet in a single cell on a second worksheet using "concatenate". I enter =CONCATENATE('IT Project Info'!C10,'IT Project Info'!C11,'IT Project Info'!C12,'IT Project Info'!C13) in the target destination cell and hit "enter". The function statement stays in the cell, however, instead of the result. I have tried concatenating information from cells on the same worksheet as a test with the same result. Thanks, Tom |
#4
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Hi Andrea
there's no difference in the result if you use the ampersand or CONCATENATE. Both should (and will) return the same thing. Benefit of the apersand (IMHO): - shorter - don't uses a function level -- Regards Frank Kabel Frankfurt, Germany "Andrea Blake" schrieb im Newsbeitrag ... I never use CONCATENATE because it does funny things. Try using & instead: ='IT Project Info'!C10&'IT Project Info'!C11&'IT Project Info'!C12&'IT Project Info'!C13 and see if you get better results. I'm pretty positive the ampersand will concatenate regardless of the data type (even mixed types). Good luck! "tommcbrny" wrote: I am trying to combine data from multiple cells on one worksheet in a single cell on a second worksheet using "concatenate". I enter =CONCATENATE('IT Project Info'!C10,'IT Project Info'!C11,'IT Project Info'!C12,'IT Project Info'!C13) in the target destination cell and hit "enter". The function statement stays in the cell, however, instead of the result. I have tried concatenating information from cells on the same worksheet as a test with the same result. Thanks, Tom |
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