How do I extract a value from a time formatted value in excel?How to get time difference as minutes in...
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How do I extract a value from a time formatted value in excel?
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How do I extract a value from a time formatted value in excel?
On the values below
column1 - is in this format => hh:mm:ss.000
column2 - is the decimal value of the
column3 - is = to column2 but I have formatted that hh:mm:ss.000
I want to be able to extract the 5 or 005 from the column 3 above. How do I do this?
To get the hour, minute, or second, I can use the hour, minute, or second functions respectively.
But how do I extract the thousand second e.g. .005 in this case?
NOTE:
1 second = 1.15741E-05(=1/86400)
0.005*(1/86400) = 0.00000005787 = the decimal presentation of 5 thousand of a second(0.005). All I need to do is change the format of the cell to hh:mm:ss.000
to present it differently.
microsoft-excel worksheet-function microsoft-excel-2010 microsoft-excel-2007
add a comment |
How do I extract a value from a time formatted value in excel?
On the values below
column1 - is in this format => hh:mm:ss.000
column2 - is the decimal value of the
column3 - is = to column2 but I have formatted that hh:mm:ss.000
I want to be able to extract the 5 or 005 from the column 3 above. How do I do this?
To get the hour, minute, or second, I can use the hour, minute, or second functions respectively.
But how do I extract the thousand second e.g. .005 in this case?
NOTE:
1 second = 1.15741E-05(=1/86400)
0.005*(1/86400) = 0.00000005787 = the decimal presentation of 5 thousand of a second(0.005). All I need to do is change the format of the cell to hh:mm:ss.000
to present it differently.
microsoft-excel worksheet-function microsoft-excel-2010 microsoft-excel-2007
add a comment |
How do I extract a value from a time formatted value in excel?
On the values below
column1 - is in this format => hh:mm:ss.000
column2 - is the decimal value of the
column3 - is = to column2 but I have formatted that hh:mm:ss.000
I want to be able to extract the 5 or 005 from the column 3 above. How do I do this?
To get the hour, minute, or second, I can use the hour, minute, or second functions respectively.
But how do I extract the thousand second e.g. .005 in this case?
NOTE:
1 second = 1.15741E-05(=1/86400)
0.005*(1/86400) = 0.00000005787 = the decimal presentation of 5 thousand of a second(0.005). All I need to do is change the format of the cell to hh:mm:ss.000
to present it differently.
microsoft-excel worksheet-function microsoft-excel-2010 microsoft-excel-2007
How do I extract a value from a time formatted value in excel?
On the values below
column1 - is in this format => hh:mm:ss.000
column2 - is the decimal value of the
column3 - is = to column2 but I have formatted that hh:mm:ss.000
I want to be able to extract the 5 or 005 from the column 3 above. How do I do this?
To get the hour, minute, or second, I can use the hour, minute, or second functions respectively.
But how do I extract the thousand second e.g. .005 in this case?
NOTE:
1 second = 1.15741E-05(=1/86400)
0.005*(1/86400) = 0.00000005787 = the decimal presentation of 5 thousand of a second(0.005). All I need to do is change the format of the cell to hh:mm:ss.000
to present it differently.
microsoft-excel worksheet-function microsoft-excel-2010 microsoft-excel-2007
microsoft-excel worksheet-function microsoft-excel-2010 microsoft-excel-2007
asked 1 hour ago
HattrickNZHattrickNZ
1226
1226
add a comment |
add a comment |
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
With a time in cell A1, use:
=RIGHT(TEXT(A1,"hh:mm:ss.000"),3)
yields milliseconds as text, and if you need it as a number:
=RIGHT(TEXT(A1,"hh:mm:ss.000"),3)*1
(the second formula gives the number of milliseconds as an integer)
Similar formulas can capture hours or minutes or seconds as integers.
add a comment |
This will return the fraction of the seconds as an integer:
=MOD(A1*86400,1)*1000
The Mod removes everything but the fraction of the second and the * 1000
causes it to be an integer.
add a comment |
If I understand correctly, you want the result to be 0.005
as a number
Your best bet may be to extract the fractions of a second as a string and convert that to a number. This should do it:
=VALUE("0." & RIGHT(TEXT(E5,"hh:mm:ss.000"),LEN(TEXT(E5,"hh:mm:ss.000"))-FIND(".",TEXT(E5,"hh:mm:ss.000"))))
add a comment |
Looks like there are lots of neat ways to do this. Here is another:
=(B8-TIME(HOUR(B8),MINUTE(B8),SECOND(B8)))*86400*1000
Where time is in cell B8.
add a comment |
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4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
With a time in cell A1, use:
=RIGHT(TEXT(A1,"hh:mm:ss.000"),3)
yields milliseconds as text, and if you need it as a number:
=RIGHT(TEXT(A1,"hh:mm:ss.000"),3)*1
(the second formula gives the number of milliseconds as an integer)
Similar formulas can capture hours or minutes or seconds as integers.
add a comment |
With a time in cell A1, use:
=RIGHT(TEXT(A1,"hh:mm:ss.000"),3)
yields milliseconds as text, and if you need it as a number:
=RIGHT(TEXT(A1,"hh:mm:ss.000"),3)*1
(the second formula gives the number of milliseconds as an integer)
Similar formulas can capture hours or minutes or seconds as integers.
add a comment |
With a time in cell A1, use:
=RIGHT(TEXT(A1,"hh:mm:ss.000"),3)
yields milliseconds as text, and if you need it as a number:
=RIGHT(TEXT(A1,"hh:mm:ss.000"),3)*1
(the second formula gives the number of milliseconds as an integer)
Similar formulas can capture hours or minutes or seconds as integers.
With a time in cell A1, use:
=RIGHT(TEXT(A1,"hh:mm:ss.000"),3)
yields milliseconds as text, and if you need it as a number:
=RIGHT(TEXT(A1,"hh:mm:ss.000"),3)*1
(the second formula gives the number of milliseconds as an integer)
Similar formulas can capture hours or minutes or seconds as integers.
edited 1 hour ago
answered 1 hour ago
Gary's StudentGary's Student
14.1k31733
14.1k31733
add a comment |
add a comment |
This will return the fraction of the seconds as an integer:
=MOD(A1*86400,1)*1000
The Mod removes everything but the fraction of the second and the * 1000
causes it to be an integer.
add a comment |
This will return the fraction of the seconds as an integer:
=MOD(A1*86400,1)*1000
The Mod removes everything but the fraction of the second and the * 1000
causes it to be an integer.
add a comment |
This will return the fraction of the seconds as an integer:
=MOD(A1*86400,1)*1000
The Mod removes everything but the fraction of the second and the * 1000
causes it to be an integer.
This will return the fraction of the seconds as an integer:
=MOD(A1*86400,1)*1000
The Mod removes everything but the fraction of the second and the * 1000
causes it to be an integer.
answered 1 hour ago
Scott CranerScott Craner
12.5k11318
12.5k11318
add a comment |
add a comment |
If I understand correctly, you want the result to be 0.005
as a number
Your best bet may be to extract the fractions of a second as a string and convert that to a number. This should do it:
=VALUE("0." & RIGHT(TEXT(E5,"hh:mm:ss.000"),LEN(TEXT(E5,"hh:mm:ss.000"))-FIND(".",TEXT(E5,"hh:mm:ss.000"))))
add a comment |
If I understand correctly, you want the result to be 0.005
as a number
Your best bet may be to extract the fractions of a second as a string and convert that to a number. This should do it:
=VALUE("0." & RIGHT(TEXT(E5,"hh:mm:ss.000"),LEN(TEXT(E5,"hh:mm:ss.000"))-FIND(".",TEXT(E5,"hh:mm:ss.000"))))
add a comment |
If I understand correctly, you want the result to be 0.005
as a number
Your best bet may be to extract the fractions of a second as a string and convert that to a number. This should do it:
=VALUE("0." & RIGHT(TEXT(E5,"hh:mm:ss.000"),LEN(TEXT(E5,"hh:mm:ss.000"))-FIND(".",TEXT(E5,"hh:mm:ss.000"))))
If I understand correctly, you want the result to be 0.005
as a number
Your best bet may be to extract the fractions of a second as a string and convert that to a number. This should do it:
=VALUE("0." & RIGHT(TEXT(E5,"hh:mm:ss.000"),LEN(TEXT(E5,"hh:mm:ss.000"))-FIND(".",TEXT(E5,"hh:mm:ss.000"))))
answered 1 hour ago
cybernetic.nomadcybernetic.nomad
2,566617
2,566617
add a comment |
add a comment |
Looks like there are lots of neat ways to do this. Here is another:
=(B8-TIME(HOUR(B8),MINUTE(B8),SECOND(B8)))*86400*1000
Where time is in cell B8.
add a comment |
Looks like there are lots of neat ways to do this. Here is another:
=(B8-TIME(HOUR(B8),MINUTE(B8),SECOND(B8)))*86400*1000
Where time is in cell B8.
add a comment |
Looks like there are lots of neat ways to do this. Here is another:
=(B8-TIME(HOUR(B8),MINUTE(B8),SECOND(B8)))*86400*1000
Where time is in cell B8.
Looks like there are lots of neat ways to do this. Here is another:
=(B8-TIME(HOUR(B8),MINUTE(B8),SECOND(B8)))*86400*1000
Where time is in cell B8.
answered 56 mins ago
BrianBrian
5487
5487
add a comment |
add a comment |
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