I have created an online survey, and people choose ten words (skills) out of 24 possible. Please see screenshot. I would like a formula that does this in layman's terms: "If I see the word "Cooperation" in the source cell, then I'll put "03b" into the target cell; but if I see "Managing" in the source cell instead, I'll put "21a" in the target cell, etc."
I've tried a few IF / Then statements, with no success. Screenshot shows the source cell upper right, and the ten target cells below left with two rows of sample results. I'm guessing the same formula can be in each of the 10 target cells.
I have cells of data with a long string of numbers such as: 20090507225836. Is there any easy way to convert them to date/time format, such as below? 5/7/2009 22:58:36
Is there any way that I can have a column of cells change the entered 4 digit to a time format? E.g. when somebody enters 1212 in a cell it will automatically convert the entered numbers to 12:12
Is there a way to enter a colon into a standard number to create a value that can be formatted into a 24 hour time value? eg a time is listed as 1345 with a general number format, and I want it returned as 13:45 witha custom format of hh:mm. Other than creating a table and using a vlookup function
I am working on a system where the system is having "australia time". Now, I want a worksheet where it should reflect the India Time after pressing a specific key in a specific cell.
I need to convert regular time to decimal time. example regular time in A1 is 1:38 I need that number to be converted to decimal time = to 13:63. add 12 to the hour and divide 38 into 60 to get the minutes. Our time clock prints on a 12 hour basis and I enter to excel in decimal time.
I need a simple formula to convert standard time (1:05pm) into military time (13:08).
I've read through several posts, but all I've found is reformatting or time subtraction type information. The reformating works to an extent, it gives me the hours in military but the minutes stay standard.
Basicly, all I need is:
Cell A1 = 1:05 p Cell B1 = formula that shows/converts 1:05 p as 13:08
I got Excel for Mac 2011 installed. I have a table called 'Raw" that holds data from the beginning until the end of 2013 (in total ~7000 rows). I have columns for Category, Start and End time, and time period in Hours, Minutes, and Seconds:
I'm trying to get an overview of how much time I've spent in January on Transportation. I would need to look at the Category entries for Transportation, then only use the ones which have the Start set to 2013/01, and then take the Hours/Minutes/Seconds, and summarise it in a new table called 'Data':
Code: A B C D E F
Month Category Occurrence Hours Minutes Seconds
2013/01 Transportation 48
[Code] .......
I have figured out a way to count the occurrences for Transportation for January:
I have a row of cells, and some of which are displaying time, but in an incorrect format.
for example 15:20 is showing in a cell as 3.2
How can I create a new cells that basically converts 3.2 into 24 hr hh:mm ....e.g. 15:20?
If I got to use the format cells option, and hh:mm, it changes the cell to the completely wrong time (i.e 04:48) ?
p.s. I should state that "some" of the cells are kind of showing the correct time, albeit with a decimal instead of a colon, for example, cell A12 is showing 4.25
one other thing I should mention.....the times will always be PM...... so 3.2 should be 15:20, and not 03:20
I have a problem that when I try to convert text to number and format the number without 2 decimal places as seen on the link I have given below, Instead of 1607.947, I get 1607947. I have Excel 2010 loaded. The details are in below picture.
When I am converting a time from Hours/Minutes to Hours/Tenths, Excel is not converting it consitantely. EXAMPLE: 1:15 = 1.25. When I format the cell to present only one place past the decimal point, sometimes the cell will round up to 1.3, and other times it will round down to 1.2. What am I missing?
I have loaded a .csv file in which the first column contains date/times, e.g. 01/12/2012 00:00. How do I now tell Excel (2010) that this is in fact a date/time format? If I select one or more of the cells, click on the Number dialog box launcher and try to pick a suitable format tghe cells resolutely refuse to budge from being text (i.e. left-justified, still allows me to edit the 'seconds' component to a number > 60). Also which data type should I be using? The only one that appears to have a full date/time format listed is Custom (not Date or Time).
I work in the flooring industry and the format we use for cuts of carpet/vinyl is 40-3 (for 40.25 feet), etc. So we are trying to create an excel spreadsheet that will add up these cuts. Right now it's kind of a mess because we have decimals in a column we will be hiding and are converting that to our industry format.
The formula I am having trouble with is as follows: =MID(A18,1,FIND(".",A18)-1)&"-"&MID(A18,FIND(".",A18),3)*12
The problem is that whenever the totals end in zero, the formula won't convert 40.00 to 40-0. It gives me an error every time. If the total is 40.25 it will convert it to 40-3 just fine.
I'm trying to convert a date in the following format: 19970121 to 1/21/1997 and am having trouble getting rid of the leading zero in the final version. I also need it to pick up the 2 digits in months that have them from 9 (Sept) through 12 (Dec), though, for use in a VLOOKUP function. Can this be done at all?
Here is the code I've been using so far that doesn't entirely work for what I need it to do:
i have this function that poulates data from a userform into a sheet.
For lLoop = 1 To MAWBNoVar With Range("B" & Rows.Count).End(xlUp) .Offset(1, 0) = Controls("txtMAWB" & lLoop) .Offset(1, 1) = Left(Controls("cbDestination" & lLoop), 3) .Offset(1, 2) = Controls("txtGW" & lLoop) .Offset(1, 3) = Controls("txtCBM" & lLoop) .Offset(1, 4) = "= ROUND(E" & Y & "*167,0)" .Offset(1, 5) = "=IF(D" & Y & ">F" & Y & ",D" & Y & ",F" & Y & ")" .Offset(1, 6) = "=IF(F" & Y & ">D" & Y & ",G" & Y & "-D" & Y & ",G" & Y & "-F" & Y & ")" Y = Y + 1 End With Next lLoop
My problem is that the data being entered into the sheet for the lines highlighted in red is going in as text, and not true numerics, so that the subsequent formulae are not working correctly.
I have 04/02/08 12:00:01 AM (mm/dd/yy hh:mm:ss AM/PM) in text format in a cell. I need to convert this to date/time custom format as given above so that I can make comparisons with NOW() output.
I am trying to provide a tool for department leaders to monitor productivity for order processing in their departments. The variables I have are: Number of orders(variable), number of pickers (variable), start time(variable). Then, I know each order takes 1 picker 4 minutes to pick on average, and there are 45 minutes worth of breaks during the picking process. So after entering the variables I used =(((C3*4)/60)/D3) to come up with the time needed to process the orders. What I can't get to is how to add this number to the start time, factor in break minutes and get to the projected completion time. I have Excel 2003 at work. Clearly I need to take a class!
I have a user form with textBox1 = start time (entered as "[h]:mm") and text Box2 = finish time (entered as "[h]:mm"). I would like textBox3 to display the difference between the start time and finish time as a general number!
For example Start time: 21:00 Finish time: 06:30 Hours worked: 9.50
I am making an excel file that should convert the distance jumped by a person to a specific rank. For example if the distance was greater or equal to 34, he would get a 10. and 34> distance >= 32, he would get a 9 and so on...
I need a formula that will should nest more than 7 functions, in this case it wont work right? So what I did was name 2 separate fuctions for example
I have a cell with 6:44:04AM as a text, and I need to convert it to number, so far I have tried: =timevalue(a1). no luck, it returns, #value!
Tried to replace AM and PM with nothing, it convert it to number, but changes the value 12:50:30 AM gets converted to 12:50:30 PM. I even tried copy, paste special, vaues, nope, nothing.