Dude, there's a whole section of the help file called "How Excel stores dates and times" and there are approximately six hundred and fourty-seven thousand pages that a Google search turns up on the subject
Dude, there's a whole section of the help file called "How Excel stores dates and times" and there are approximately six hundred and fourty-seven thousand pages that a Google search turns up on the subject
That I did, but the time areas that were negative times showed up as #######, and I checked the formating if the column. So I figured I'd have to create a column sort for just those instances, reformat the formula and go from there.
While generally this is correct, it does not apply in this scenario. The reason being is that by default, excel uses the 1900 date format, which does not allow negative times. In order to properly display negative times you must change it to the 1904 format. To do this:
Tools --> Options --> Calculation --> 1904 Date System
This will let your negative times show properly.
While generally this is correct, it does not apply in this scenario. The reason being is that by default, excel uses the 1900 date format, which does not allow negative times. In order to properly display negative times you must change it to the 1904 format. To do this:
Tools --> Options --> Calculation --> 1904 Date System
This will let your negative times show properly.
While generally this is correct, it does not apply in this scenario. The reason being is that by default, excel uses the 1900 date format, which does not allow negative times. In order to properly display negative times you must change it to the 1904 format. To do this:
Tools --> Options --> Calculation --> 1904 Date System
This will let your negative times show properly.
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