J
Jeff Norville
It's Monday so I suspect this is a personal quirk rather than one in
Excel, but for the life of me it looks like a programmatic quirk.
So I'm looking through a list of timestamps (ws = LOOKUPDATA) for
matching date/times, then taking the associated reading (from the
range REFDATA!A2:B3457); out of a test range of 50 values, nine return
"#N/A" which means the formula couldn't find a match. However, I see
those matches when I do my own Find.
Here's the formula:
=VLOOKUP(LOOKUPDATA!D2, REFDATA!A2:B3457,2, FALSE)
The data referenced in
5/22/09 10:00 <--VLOOKUP finds a match fine
5/22/09 11:00 <--VLOOKUP finds no match
5/22/09 11:00 pasted as string is:
39955.4583333333
The other erring dates, when pasted as string, also end in the "3-bar"
pattern; weird. However, using the Excel "Find" I can find the cells
fine.
Is Excel not matching two date/time columns even though they're
formatted identically?
More importantly -- fix suggestions?
Regards,
Jeff
Excel, but for the life of me it looks like a programmatic quirk.
So I'm looking through a list of timestamps (ws = LOOKUPDATA) for
matching date/times, then taking the associated reading (from the
range REFDATA!A2:B3457); out of a test range of 50 values, nine return
"#N/A" which means the formula couldn't find a match. However, I see
those matches when I do my own Find.
Here's the formula:
=VLOOKUP(LOOKUPDATA!D2, REFDATA!A2:B3457,2, FALSE)
The data referenced in
5/22/09 10:00 <--VLOOKUP finds a match fine
5/22/09 11:00 <--VLOOKUP finds no match
5/22/09 11:00 pasted as string is:
39955.4583333333
The other erring dates, when pasted as string, also end in the "3-bar"
pattern; weird. However, using the Excel "Find" I can find the cells
fine.
Is Excel not matching two date/time columns even though they're
formatted identically?
More importantly -- fix suggestions?
Regards,
Jeff