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I have an excel column with values and "-", and I want to have only the number values in another column.
How can I do?
Here the column
Try This:
Select the respective column, then go to
Data Tab > Data Tools > Text to Columns
Delimited > click next > then check Other tab and enter "-"
then click next and click finish
finally "-" are disappeared
Essentially:
I have a cell value that looks like this:
Hello - (Whats Up (HowAreYou))
I need to extract the value of what is inside the outside parenthesis:
Whats Up (HowAreYou)
How can this formula be modified to accommodate this requirement:
=MID(C11,SEARCH("(",C11)+1,SEARCH(")",C11)-SEARCH("(",C11)-1)
use FILTERXML:
=FILTERXML("<a>"&SUBSTITUTE(SUBSTITUTE(A1,"(","<b>",1),")","</b>",LEN(A1)-LEN(SUBSTITUTE(A1,")","")))&"</a>","//b")
Or:
=MID(REPLACE(A1,FIND("#",SUBSTITUTE(A1,")","#",LEN(A1)-LEN(SUBSTITUTE(A1,")","")))),999,""),FIND("(",A1)+1,999)
Try:
=MID(A1,SEARCH("(",A1)+1,SEARCH("#",SUBSTITUTE(A1,")","#",LEN(A1)-LEN(SUBSTITUTE(A1,")",""))))-SEARCH("(",A1)-1)
Amongst the other good answers, you could alternatively try:
=REPLACE(LEFT(A1,MATCH(2,1/(MID(A1,SEQUENCE(LEN(A1)),1)=")"))-1),1,FIND("(",A1),)
Or, without Excel 365:
=REPLACE(LEFT(A1,MATCH(2,1/(MID(A1,ROW(A$1:INDEX(A:A,LEN(A1))),1)=")"))-1),1,FIND("(",A1),)
Note: This last formula requires you to enter as array formula through Ctrl+Shift+Enter
You can also use "Text To Column" function. You can find it in data tab in data tools group.
Select the cell or column that contains the text you want to split.
Select Data > Text to Columns.
In the Convert Text to Columns Wizard, select Delimited > Next.
Select the Delimiters "space" and "other" << put "-" in the text box next to "other" > Next.
Slect the location where you want that data and click finish.
Note: by this way you will end up with double bracket at the end that you can fix with replace function. Selecd your data and click find and replace. Put )) in find box and ) in replace window, click replace all.
Formula:
Assuming your data is in cell A1
Hello - (Whats Up (HowAreYou))
= RIGHT(SUBSTITUTE(A1, "))", ")", 1), LEN(SUBSTITUTE(A1, "))", ")", 1)) - SEARCH(" - ", SUBSTITUTE(A1, "))", ")", 1))
I want to extract the two specific words from excel cell ie: cell A1 contains data
{"defvcision":"DISASDEE","reascdwon":"labwcel","cowcddcents":"SwcA:Ercwdcror:CwcOwccPcewS:SewellerApcwecpewcal-BwerLR:2/24/2020 : 306973918 # snedcharo"}
Now I want to extract 306973918 and snedcharo from cell. These to values will be dynamic in other cells ie A2 A3...
I have tried formula
=MID(A1, SEARCH(":",A1) + 1, SEARCH(":",A1,SEARCH(":",A1)+1) - SEARCH(":",A1) - 1)
but that is not working.
if all the cells are kinda the same format you can also use text to columns on this cell with delimited and space and your number will be on "C" column
The easiest would be to use UDF.
In order to define UDF you need to write simple function in worksheets module, like in below picture:
Then you can use it in worksheet like below:
Below is the function code, which you can adjust to your needs:
Function ExtractText(text As String)
text = StrReverse(text)
colonIdx = InStr(1, text, ":")
apostropheIdx = InStr(1, text, """")
text = Mid(text, apostropheIdx + 1, colonIdx - apostropheIdx - 2)
ExtractText = StrReverse(text)
End Function
In A2, formula copied down to A3 :
=TRIM(LEFT(RIGHT(SUBSTITUTE(SUBSTITUTE(SUBSTITUTE(A$1,"""}","")," #","")," ",REPT(" ",99)),(3-ROW(A1))*99),99))
How can I append text to every cell in a column in Excel? I need to add a comma (",") to the end.
Example:
email#address.com turns into email#address.com,
Data Sample:
m2engineers#yahoo.co.in
satishmm_2sptc#yahoo.co.in
threed_precisions#rediffmail.com
workplace_solution#yahoo.co.in
threebworkplace#dataone.in
dtechbng#yahoo.co.in
innovations#yahoo.co.in
sagar#mmm.com
bpsiva#mmm.com
nsrinivasrao#mmm.com
pdilip#mmm.com
vvijaykrishnan#mmm.com
mrdevaraj#mmm.com
b3minvestorhelpdesk#mmm.com
sbshridhar#mmm.com
balaji#mmm.com
schakravarthi#mmm.com
srahul1#mmm.com
khramesh2#mmm.com
avinayak#mmm.com
rockindia#hotmail.com
See if this works for you.
All your data is in column A (beginning at row 1).
In column B, row 1, enter =A1&","
This will make cell B1 equal A1 with a comma appended.
Now select cell B1 and drag from the bottom right of cell down through all your rows (this copies the formula and uses the corresponding column A value.)
Select the newly appended data, copy it and paste it where you need using Paste -> By Value
That's It!
It's a simple "&" function.
=cell&"yourtexthere"
Example - your cell says Mickey, and you want Mickey Mouse. Mickey is in A2. In B2, type
=A2&" Mouse"
Then, copy and "paste special" for values.
B2 now reads "Mickey Mouse"
It's simple...
=CONCATENATE(A1, ",")
Example: if email#address.com is in the A1 cell then write in another cell: =CONCATENATE(A1, ",")
email#address.com After this formula you will get email#address.com,
For remove formula: copy that cell and use Alt + E + S + V or paste special value.
There is no need to use extra columns or VBA if you only want to add the character for display purposes.
As this post suggests, all you need to do is:
Select the cell(s) you would like to apply the formatting to
Click on the Home tab
Click on Number
Select Custom
In the Type text box, enter your desired formatting by placing the number zero inside whatever characters you want.
Example of such text for formatting:
If you want the cell holding value 120.00 to read $120K, type $0K
Pretty simple...you could put all of them in a cell using the concatenate function:
=CONCATENATE(A1, ", ", A2, ", ", and so on)
Highlight the column and then Ctrl + F.
Find and replace
Find ".com"
Replace ".com, "
And then one for .in
Find and replace
Find ".in"
Replace ".in, "
Simplest of them all is to use the "Flash Fill" option under the "Data" tab.
Keep the original input column on the left (say column A) and just add a blank column on the right of it (say column B, this new column will be treated as output).
Just fill in a couple of cells of Column B with actual expected output. In this case:
m2engineers#yahoo.co.in,
satishmm_2sptc#yahoo.co.in,
Then select the column range where you want the output along with the first couple of cells you filled manually ... then do the magic...click on "Flash Fill".
It basically understands the output pattern corresponding to the input and fills the empty cells.
I just wrote this for another answer:
You would call it using the form using your example: appendTextToRange "[theRange]", ",".
Sub testit()
appendTextToRange "A1:D4000", "hey there"
End Sub
Sub appendTextToRange(rngAddress As String, append As String)
Dim arr() As Variant, c As Variant
arr = Range(rngAddress).Formula
For x = LBound(arr, 1) To UBound(arr, 1)
For y = LBound(arr, 2) To UBound(arr, 2)
Debug.Print arr(x, y)
If arr(x, y) = "" Then
arr(x, y) = append
ElseIf Left(arr(x, y), 1) = "=" Then
arr(x, y) = arr(x, y) & " & "" " & append & """"
Else
arr(x, y) = arr(x, y) & " " & append
End If
Next
Next
Range(rngAddress).Formula = arr
End Sub
Select the range of cells, type in the value and press Ctrl + Enter.
This, of course, is true if you want to do it manually.
Put the text/value in the first cell, then copy the cell, mark the whole colum and 'paste' the copied text/value.
This works in Excel 97 - sorry no other version available on my side...
This is addition to #Edward-Leno 's answer for more detail/explanation and cases where the text cells are formulas instead of values, and you want to retain the original formula.
Suppose your cells look like this (formulas)
="email" & "#" & "address.com"
=A1 & "#" & C1
instead of this (values)
email#address.com
If "email" and "address.com" were some cells like A1 is the email and C1 is the address.com part, then you'd have something like =A1&"#"&C1 which would be important to retain since A1 and C1 might not be constants and can change, so the comma-concatenated values would change, like if C1 is "gmail.com", "yahoo.com", or something else based on its formula.
Values method: The following steps will successfully append text but only keep the value using a scratch column (this works for rows, too, but for simplicity, the directions are for columns)
Assume column A is your data.
In scratch column B, start anywhere like the top of column B such as at B1 and put this formula:
=A1&","
Essentially, the "&" is the concatenation operator, combining two strings together (numbers are converted to strings). The "," can be adjusted to ", " if you want a space after the comma.
Copy the cell B1 and copy it down to all other cells in column B, either by clicking at the bottom right of cell B1 and dragging down, or copying with "Ctrl+C" or right-click > "Copy".
Paste B1 to all cells in column B with "Ctrl+V" or right-click > "Paste Options:" > "Paste". You should see the data looking like you intended.
Copy all cells in column B and paste them to where you want via right-click > "Paste Options:" > "Values". We select values so it doesn't mess up any formatting or conditional formatting
Formula retention method: The following steps will successfully retain the original formula. The process is similar to the values method, and only step 2, the formula used to concatenate the comma, changes.
Assume column A is your data.
In scratch column B, start anywhere like the top of column B such as at B1 and put this formula:
=FORMULATEXT(A1)&","
FORMULATEXT() grabs the formula of the cell as opposed to the value of it, so a simple example would be that it grabs =2+2 instead of 4, or =A1 & "#" & C1 where A1 is "Bob" and C1 is "gmail.com" instead of Bob#gmail.com.
Note: This formula only works for Excel versions 2013 and greater. For alternative equivalent solutions for Excel 2010 and older, see this superuser answer: https://superuser.com/a/894441/495155
Copy the cell B1 and copy it down to all other cells in column B, either by clicking at the bottom right of cell B1 and dragging down, or copying with "Ctrl+C" or right-click > "Copy".
Paste B1 to all cells in column B with "Ctrl+V" or right-click > "Paste Options:" > "Paste". You should see the data looking like you intended.
Copy all cells in column B and paste them to where you want via right-click > "Paste Options:" > "Values". We select values so it doesn't mess up any formatting or conditional formatting
Type it in one cell, copy that cell, select all the cells you want to fill, and paste.
Alternatively, type it in one cell, select the black square in the bottom-right of that cell, and drag down.
I have a column with some text in each cell.
I want to add some text, for example "X", at the start of all cells. For example:
A B
----- >>>> ----
1 X1
2 X2
3 X3
What is the easiest way to do this?
Type this in cell B1, and copy down...
="X"&A1
This would also work:
=CONCATENATE("X",A1)
And here's one of many ways to do this in VBA (Disclaimer: I don't code in VBA very often!):
Sub AddX()
Dim i As Long
With ActiveSheet
For i = 1 To .Range("A65536").End(xlUp).Row Step 1
.Cells(i, 2).Value = "X" & Trim(Str(.Cells(i, 1).Value))
Next i
End With
End Sub
Select the cell you want to be like this,
Go To Cell Properties (or CTRL 1)
under Number tab
in custom
enter
"X"#
Select the cell you want to be like this, go to cell properties (or CTRL 1) under Number tab in custom enter "X"#
Put a space between " and # if needed
Select the cell you want,
Go To Format Cells (or CTRL+1),
Select the "custom" Tab, enter your required format like : "X"#
use a space if needed.
for example, I needed to insert the word "Hours" beside my numbers and used this format : # "hours"
Enter the function of = CONCATENATE("X",A1) in one cell other than A say D
Click the Cell D1, and drag the fill handle across the range that you want to fill.All the cells should have been added the specific prefix text.
You can see the changes made to the repective cells.
Option 1:
select the cell(s), under formatting/number/custom formatting, type in
"BOB" General
now you have a prefix "BOB" next to numbers, dates, booleans, but not next to TEXTs
Option2:
As before, but use the following format
_ "BOB" #_
now you have a prefix BOB, this works even if the cell contained text
Cheers, Sudhi
Michael.. if its just for formatting then you can format the cell to append any value.
Just right click and select Format Cell on the context menu, select custom and then specify type as you wish... for above example it would be X0. Here 'X' is the prefix and 0 is the numeric after.
Hope this helps..
Cheers...
Go to Format Cells - Custom. Type the required format into the list first. To prefix "0" before the text characters in an Excel column, use the Format 0####. Remember, use the character "#" equal to the maximum number of digits in a cell of that column. For e.g., if there are 4 cells in a column with the entries - 123, 333, 5665, 7 - use the formula 0####. Reason - A single # refers to reference of just one digit.
Another way to do this:
Put your prefix in one column say column A in excel
Put the values to which you want to add prefix in another column say column B in excel
In Column C, use this formula;
"C1=A1&B1"
Copy all the values in column C and paste it again in the same selection but as values only.
Type a value in one cell (EX:B4 CELL). For temporary use this formula in other cell (once done delete it). =CONCAT(XY,B4) . click and drag till the value you need. Copy the whole column and right click paste only values (second option).
I tried and it's working as expected.