How do i calculate time difference in milliseconds between two columns where value of time has milliseconds component ... i.e. 16:33:44:056. Please refer to column E and J in pic .. i want to calculate difference in milli seconds between J and E ...
I have tried using the following formula to alculate difference in milli seconds but its giving incorrect results. =((RIGHT(J1,3))-(RIGHT(E1,3)))
It appears your date/time is a text value.
A "real" time value would normally be seen as 16:11:52.052
But by replacing the last : with a ., excel will see it as a real time and ordinary math can be done.
Excel stores date/time as days and fractions of a day.
So a formula that should work:
=ROUND((SUBSTITUTE(J1,":",".",3)-SUBSTITUTE(E1,":",".",3))*86400000,0)
Format the result as General or as Number with no decimal places
Try
=(J1-E1)*1000*60*60*24
or more concisely
=(J1-E1)*86400000
Then format your formula column to general.
This assumes the data is actually stored as datetime and not a text value.
If you change the format of your time columns, and the column to show the difference, to
hh:mm:ss.000
You can simply use subtraction:
(You'll have to tweak the actual cells to have . before the milliseconds, just formatting won't do it)
If the part of that string corresponding to hours, minutes and seconds is always the same, and time in J is always bigger than time in E, you could do:
=VALUE(RIGHT(J1;3))-VALUE(RIGHT(E1;3))
Related
I am using a spreadsheet to record the intervals between certain medical events. Each event's timestamp is recorded in one column, so the interval between each event is the difference between consecutive cells (and the time since the last event uses now()).
First problem: I want to display the interval in days, hours and minutes. None of the built-in formats will do this, they report the days remaining after discarding complete months. So I am using this expression:
TEXT(TRUNC(C2-C1),"0") & " days " & TEXT(MOD(C2-C1,1),"hh "" hrs "" mm ""mins""")
which (e.g.) shows "46 days 13 hrs 44 mins". I was hoping there was a way to format a date/time value to show this rather than making the cell a string value, but I haven't been able to find one.
Second problem: I want to display the average value of all completed intervals in the same format. Because I can't average the string values produced by the previous expression I need to average the numeric equivalent (which I'd prefer not to have visible in the sheet) and then convert it to a string as for a single interval.
I can probably do this with a similar approach (if I don't run out of characters to enter the formula) but it seems to me that there must be a better way.
Ideally there is a solution which will work in Excel 2010. Has anyone solved a similar problem before and can give me some pointers?
Thanks, T
Edit: Some data to show what I am working with (I hope the image is readable). Here's a few lines from the sheet.
The formula for H2 etc. is
=IF(G2="c",NOW()-C2,"")
I5 is calculated as the difference between C5 and Cprev (where prev is chosen so that D5 and Dprev are both set). Obvious extension of this for J and K.
M2, M3 and M4 are respectively
=AVERAGEIF(K5:(INDIRECT("K"&(ROWS(K:K)))),"<>0")
=AVERAGEIF(J5:(INDIRECT("J"&(ROWS(J:J)))),"<>0")
=AVERAGEIF(I5:(INDIRECT("I"&(ROWS(I:I)))),"<>0")
Now, I can use a custom format for the values in H, I and J, and for M3 and M4, because these values will never exceed a few days. But values in K and M2 will be somewhere around 100 so I can't just format the raw value.
With custom formatting applied:
Here K6 and M2 say "27 days.." not "87 days..". That's what I'd like to fix nicely, hopefully without populating additional cells or writing a 3gl function to do it.
Date_Times in Excel are stored as days (with the decimal part representing parts of a day).
If the date matters, rather than just a number of days, then day zero is 1899/12/31.
Your first thought was right - do with formatting, not by turning a number into a string.
Entering date into A and time into B, with C=A+B is a good start, so that you can E.g. subtract one point in time from another without having to do anything about straddling midnight, month-ends etc, calculate averages etc.
Consolidating the comments already here: per https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/format-numbers-as-dates-or-times-418bd3fe-0577-47c8-8caa-b4d30c528309 you cannot get d for days above 31 (and it won't accept a format 0 hh:mm:ss )
I suggest that you do all your calculations using just numbers to get to say column M, and in N2 put =M2 etc, so you have the same values twice.
Then for formatting, use Format Cells | Number | Custom.
In column M put 0 "days".
In column N put hh "hours" mm "minutes".
I have the list of data that showing the Hours and the Minutes that I extract from the system. I need to be extract the hours.
As example below, column B first row, the Hours would be 64 and the minutes would be 46.
But when I used the formula =Hour , its turn up the different value since its actually decimal number.
Cannot use left() , it will give the actual decimal number.
Updated:
We tried the #harun24HR 's but cannot readable the value.
But if you noticed, if i copy and paste the value is different. thats why the search not applicable.
4th Update:
To Solar Mike, I have tried the formula given from the thread the i think the value not readable
It's a time value which Excel stores as calculated value based on 24 hours = 1.
To retrieve the hours only you can use:
=INT(A2*24)
To retrieve the minutes only you can use:
=(A1-(INT(A1*24)/24))*24*60
Your time value is already a number in time format so you just need it to change it to decimal system. Dates and time values are numbers. Even if you see it as 30/09/2019 or 12:00:00, actually, for Excel, both cases are numbers.
First date Excel can recognize properly is 01/01/1900 which integer numeric value is 1. Number 2 would be 02/01/1900 and so on. Actually, today is 44659.
Now, about your data, you posted this screenshoot:
So the value is numeric, not text/string. In Excel, what you see is not always what you have. Probably that column has been formatted using custom mask. My fake data is like this:
The numeric value is 02/01/1900 16:46:36 (or 02/01/1900 4:46:36 PM it depends on your regional settings) but I've applied a custom format like this:
[hh]" hours" mm " minutes"
So what I have is a number but what I see is a text!
We have to work with the number (to be honest, ist's easier to work with numbers), so to extract the total hours, minutes and seconds.
Formula in B1: =INT(A1*24) total hours
Formula in C1: =INT(A1*24*60-B1*60) total minutes
Formula in D1: =A1*24*60*60-B1*60*60-C1*60 total seconds
This should guide you on whatever are you trying to achieve.
From your current sample data you try-
For hour =LEFT(A2,SEARCH(" ",A2)-1)
For minutes =RIGHT(SUBSTITUTE(A2," minutes",""),2)
I have two columns with datetime values in this format dd/mm/yyyy hh:mm:ss.How do i calculate the difference between two columns in minutes and show a value if it exceeds certain minutes. For example if the difference of column B - A is less than 5 minutes, than it should show 'ok' else it should show 'fail'. Example
A B C
8/5/2015 3:25:00 PM 8/5/2015 3:35:00 PM Fail
All that is needed is this formula:
=IF((B1-A1)*1440<5,"OK","Fail")
(B1-A1)*1440 returns the number of minutes difference.
We're assuming that the second time is greater than the first. (And also assuming the same time zone.)
You can use the Hour(), Minute() Day() and month() functions to create an amalgam formula - it doesn't seem particularly sensible to do with numbers alone using cell-INT(cell).
I have two time:
9:29:00 AM (B2)
6:16:00 PM (C2)
I want to get the hh:mm (hours and minutes) between those two times. I tried the following function:
=TEXT(B2-C2,"h:mm")
But I get a #VALUE! error.
I formatted the two time cells as TIME format (*h:mm:ss am:pm) and result cell also as TIME format (hh:mm)
Is that the right way round? Try
=C2-B2
You don't need TEXT function
I believe your #VALUE error is due to your order of subtraction, but I can't be sure without knowing which of those times is B2 and which is C2, and I can't quite comment on your question yet, so an answer it is!
Times in excel are stored as doubles which increment by 1 each day; 0.5 is 12 hours etc.
Best thing to do is use =TEXT(B2-C2,"HH:MM")
This will format B2-C2 (a decimal number) as a time interval.
Of course the contents of B2 and C2 must be numeric; see my VALUE function in the comments.
As barry houdini mentioned back in 2013, I also ran into the error of subtracting giving a negative number, and excel just throws an error. No other response on the internet gave me good results. Although my method is longer, it always works with times in hh:mm:ss AM/PM. Just change the text format part of the formula for whatever you have. My data was:
11:15:45 PM 1:41:20 AM
I converted it to military time for ease with
=TEXT(A2, "hh:mm:ss")
Data was now:
23:15:45 01:41:20
I made another column, let's call it C, that just subtracts the second time from the first time,
=B2-A2
I next used an IF statement on this column, so that if the absolute value of the difference was the same as the number (a positive), I'd use
TEXT(B2-A2,"hh:mm:ss")
which just subtracts the later time from the earlier time. But...
If the absolute value of the difference was not the same, e.g. error-ville with a lot of hashes ##########, I use:
TEXT(24-(A10-B10),"hh:mm:ss")
Altogether, we have one more column, which finally spits out the correct hour difference. This column is predicated on columns A, B, and our error-prone difference column C:
=IF(C2=ABS(C2),TEXT(B2-A2,"hh:mm:ss"),TEXT(24-(A2-B2),"hh:mm:ss"))
this is the most ridiculous thing I have ever done. It's been years and such a simple case, never solved by Excel.
I need to create and Excel table that computes daily training times. each row has the following fields: Date, Distance, Time and Minutes/Km. My main problem is that I want to display the Time in format of mm:ss. For example: 24 min and 3 sec should be 24:03, but "Excel" turns it to 00:03:00 (3 min after midnight). I've tried setting up "special formatting" but still "Excel insists" on formatting the hours. More over, training may exceed 60 minutes and I still want it only as mm:ss
My second question is after I'm done with the formatting issue, what is the simple way to compute Time/Distance?
enter the values as 0:mm:ss and format as [m]:ss
as this is now in the mins & seconds, simple arithmetic will allow you to calculate your statistics
Excel shows 24:03 as 3 minutes when you format it as time, because 24:03 is the same as 12:03 AM (in military time).
Use General Format to Add Times
Instead of trying to format as Time, use the General Format and the following formula:
=number of minutes + (number of seconds / 60)
Ex: for 24 minutes and 3 seconds:
=24+3/60
This will give you a value of 24.05.
Do this for each time period. Let's say you enter this formula in cells A1 and A2. Then, to get the total sum of elapsed time, use this formula in cell A3:
=INT(A1+A2)+MOD(A1+A2,1)
Convert back to minutes and seconds
If you put =24+3/60 into each cell, you will have a value of 48.1 in cell A3.
Now you need to convert this back to minutes and seconds. Use the following formula in cell A4:
=MOD(A3,1)*60
This takes the decimal portion and multiples it by 60. Remember, we divided by 60 in the beginning, so to convert it back to seconds we need to multiply.
You could have also done this separately, i.e. in cell A3 use this formula:
=INT(A1+A2)
and this formula in cell A4:
=MOD(A1+A2,1)*60
Here's a screenshot showing the final formulas:
To make life easier when entering multiple dates/times it is possible to use a custom format to remove the need to enter the colon, and the leading "hour" 0. This however requires a second field for the numerical date to be stored, as the displayed date from the custom format is in base 10.
Displaying a number as a time (no need to enter colons, but no time conversion)
For displaying the times on the sheet, and for entering them without having to type the colon set the cell format to custom and use:
0/:00
Then enter your time. For example, if you wanted to enter 62:30, then you would simply type 6230 and your custom format would visually insert a colon 2 decimal points from the right.
If you only need to display the times, stop here.
Converting number to time
If you need to be able to calculate with the times, you will need to convert them from base 10 into the time format.
This can be done with the following formula (change A2 to the relevant cell reference):
=TIME(0,TRUNC(A2/100),MOD(A2,100))
=TIME starts the number to time conversion
We don't need hours, so enter 0, at the beginning of the formula, as the format is always hh,mm,ss (to display hours and minutes instead of minutes and seconds, place the 0 at the end of the formula).
For the minutes, TRUNC(A2/100), discards the rightmost 2 digits.
For the seconds, MOD(A2,100) keeps the rightmost 2 digits and discards everything to the left.
The above formula was found and adapted from this article:
PC Mag.com - Easy Date and Time Entry in Excel
Alternatively, you could skip the 0/:00 custom formatting, and just enter your time in a cell to be referenced of the edge of the visible workspace or on another sheet as you would for the custom formatting (ie: 6230 for 62:30)
Then change the display format of the cells with the formula to [m]:ss as #Sean Chessire suggested.
Here is a screen shot to show what I mean.
If you are using hand inputted data, you can enter your data as mm:ss,0 or mm:ss.0 depending on your language/region selection instead of 00:mm:ss.
You need to specify your cell format as [m]:ss if you like to see all minutes seconds format instead of hours minutes seconds format.
as text:
=CONCATENATE(TEXT(cell;"d");" days ";TEXT(cell;"t");" hours ";MID(TEXT(cell;"hh:mm:ss");4;2);" minutes ";TEXT(cell;"s");" seconds")
5.In the Format Cells box, click Custom in the Category list.
6.In the Type box, at the top of the list of formats, type [h]:mm;# and then click OK. (That’s a colon after [h], and a semicolon after mm.)
YOu can then add hours. The format will be in the Type list the next time you need it.
From MS, works well.
http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/excel-help/add-or-subtract-time-HA102809662.aspx
One convenient trick to entering elapsed times into Excel is to have two zeros and a colon before the number of minutes, details follow. For copy and paste operations into Excel without have to worry about formatting at all one can use the format 00:XX:XX where XX are two digits totaling < 60. In that case, Excel will echo 0:XX:XX in the cell contents displayed and store the data as 12:XX:XX AM. If one pastes data in a 00:XXX:XX format into Excel, or 00:XX:XX where either XX > 59 this will be converted into a fraction of a day.
For example, 00:121:12 becomes 0.0841666666666667, which if multiplied by the number of seconds in a day, 86,400, becomes 7272 s. Next, 00:21:12 would by default show 0:21:12 stored as 12:21:12 AM. Finally, 00:21:60 becomes 0.0152777777777778, also a fraction of a day.
This suggestion is made merely to avoid having to worry about specific formatting in Excel, and letting the program worry about it. Note, for Excel data internally formatted as 12:XX:XX AM one can only use certain Excel commands, for example, one can take an average. However, subtraction will only work when the result is a positive number. Such that converting times into seconds, fractions of a day, or other real number is suggested for access to more complete arithmetic operation coverage.
For example, if one has a column of mixed time formats, or times that are negative and will not display, if one changes the number formatting to General, all the times will be converted to fractions of a day.