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How do I extract a value from a time formatted value in excel?
How to get time difference as minutes in Excel?Convert from seconds to minutes in Open OfficeFrom date and time in column tot date in column and time in rows to be able to make a 2D chartgroup values in set of 5 and then return the first value from each groupHow to extract Date and time from data entered as October 29, 2014 4:20PM PDTKeeping time format in a concatenateConverting hours over 24 to decimalConvert time strings to Excel time formatExcel automatic value for certain values of previous columnExcel Spreadsheet Formula for Calculating Dollar Amount based on Time
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 3 hours ago
HattrickNZHattrickNZ
1276
1276
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 |
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 |
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 |
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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 3 hours ago
answered 3 hours 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 3 hours ago
Scott CranerScott Craner
12.5k11318
12.5k11318
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 2 hours ago
BrianBrian
5587
5587
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 3 hours ago
cybernetic.nomadcybernetic.nomad
2,566617
2,566617
add a comment |
add a comment |
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