Hi Folks!
Have come across the following "feature" in Excel regarding dates which I thought users should be aware of.
(see also faq68-5827).
If you're regional settings are not USA then take care if using a third party program to transfer date-type data into an Excel spreadsheet.
I've a sheet with 33800 rows in which two of the columns are dates ('dd/mm/yyyy' format).
36% (!) of the dates in these two columns have been randomly transposed into "mm/dd/yyyy" format by Excel.
Have exhaustively checked the data being transferred and the fault definitely appears to be at the Excel end...
If your running batch programs feeding data to spreadsheets for financial analyisis then this could be a bit of a problem?
Regards
Steve
Have come across the following "feature" in Excel regarding dates which I thought users should be aware of.
(see also faq68-5827).
If you're regional settings are not USA then take care if using a third party program to transfer date-type data into an Excel spreadsheet.
I've a sheet with 33800 rows in which two of the columns are dates ('dd/mm/yyyy' format).
36% (!) of the dates in these two columns have been randomly transposed into "mm/dd/yyyy" format by Excel.
Have exhaustively checked the data being transferred and the fault definitely appears to be at the Excel end...
If your running batch programs feeding data to spreadsheets for financial analyisis then this could be a bit of a problem?
Regards
Steve