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Copy from one worksheet to another changes the year from 2009 to 2



 
 
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  #1  
Old November 12th, 2009, 06:14 AM posted to microsoft.public.excel.misc
Peter Edwards
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Posts: 5
Default Copy from one worksheet to another changes the year from 2009 to 2

Formatting of the first worksheet is custom d/mm/yyyy hh:mm. But when the
cell is copied and pasted to a new worksheet the year changes from 2009 to
2013.

I'm running Excel 2007 (Office 2007 SP 2 12.0.6514.5000) and Windows 7. Have
just upgraded to Win . I've never experienced this problem with dates before!

Cant seem to find any info about what may be causing this. Any assistance
appreciated.

Pete
  #2  
Old November 12th, 2009, 06:32 AM posted to microsoft.public.excel.misc
Jacob Skaria
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Posts: 5,952
Default Copy from one worksheet to another changes the year from 2009 to 2

From Excel Options check whether the option '1904 date system' is checked

If this post helps click Yes
---------------
Jacob Skaria


"Peter Edwards" wrote:

Formatting of the first worksheet is custom d/mm/yyyy hh:mm. But when the
cell is copied and pasted to a new worksheet the year changes from 2009 to
2013.

I'm running Excel 2007 (Office 2007 SP 2 12.0.6514.5000) and Windows 7. Have
just upgraded to Win . I've never experienced this problem with dates before!

Cant seem to find any info about what may be causing this. Any assistance
appreciated.

Pete

  #3  
Old November 12th, 2009, 01:34 PM posted to microsoft.public.excel.misc
Dave Peterson
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Posts: 19,791
Default Copy from one worksheet to another changes the year from 2009 to 2

Saved from a previous post:

One workbook was using a base year of 1900 and the other was using 1904.
(tools|options|calculation tab|1904 date system)

One way to add those four years back is to find an empty cell, put 1462 into
that cell.

Copy that cell.

Select your range that contains the dates. Edit|PasteSpecial|click Add (in the
operation box).

You may have to reformat the cell as a date (mine turned to a 5 digit number).
But it should work.

You may want to do it against a copy...just in case.

(I'm not sure which one you'll fix. You may want to edit|pastespecial|click
subtract.)

Most windows users use 1900 as the base date. Mac users (mostly??) use 1904 as
the base date.

Peter Edwards wrote:

Formatting of the first worksheet is custom d/mm/yyyy hh:mm. But when the
cell is copied and pasted to a new worksheet the year changes from 2009 to
2013.

I'm running Excel 2007 (Office 2007 SP 2 12.0.6514.5000) and Windows 7. Have
just upgraded to Win . I've never experienced this problem with dates before!

Cant seem to find any info about what may be causing this. Any assistance
appreciated.

Pete


--

Dave Peterson
  #4  
Old November 12th, 2009, 03:58 PM posted to microsoft.public.excel.misc
Peter Edwards
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 5
Default Copy from one worksheet to another changes the year from 2009

Thanks Dave and Jacob

Interesting how I made a assumption about the Win 7 upgrade! Never assume, eh!

Many, many thanks for your help.

Cheers
Peter

 




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