Excel hh:mm format

T

The Mysterious J

In some worksheets, a cell formatted hh:mm with a value of 24 will yield the
desired result - 24:00 (24 hours). As of today some worksheets are yielding
00:00 for the same value of 24, and in the formula bar, you can see that the
24 has been converted to 1/24/1900 12:00:00AM - the 24th day of the century.
How can this be corrected so that it will show 24 hours.
 
F

Fred Smith

To get 24:00 displayed, you need a format of [hh]:mm, not hh:mm.

However, I doubt that's your problem. To get the results you are showing,
someone must have entered 24, as opposed to 24:00, which Excel interpreted
as 24 days, rather than 24 hours. Correct the data entry, and you should be
fine.

Regards,
Fred.
 
T

The Mysterious J

This still didn't quite work. Using format [hh]:mm and entering the value 24
still converted the 24 into 01/24/1900 12:00 a.m., only now the display shows
576:00 - because 24 days into the century meant 576 hours had passed. Is
there something else I should be changing to get the value 24 to show as 24
hours, and not 24 days?

Fred Smith said:
To get 24:00 displayed, you need a format of [hh]:mm, not hh:mm.

However, I doubt that's your problem. To get the results you are showing,
someone must have entered 24, as opposed to 24:00, which Excel interpreted
as 24 days, rather than 24 hours. Correct the data entry, and you should be
fine.

Regards,
Fred.

The Mysterious J said:
In some worksheets, a cell formatted hh:mm with a value of 24 will yield
the
desired result - 24:00 (24 hours). As of today some worksheets are
yielding
00:00 for the same value of 24, and in the formula bar, you can see that
the
24 has been converted to 1/24/1900 12:00:00AM - the 24th day of the
century.
How can this be corrected so that it will show 24 hours.
 
P

pdberger

J --

I think the previous answer may have addressed the problem -- if you're
entering '24', that's the issue. You should be entering '24:00'. Does that
fix it?

HTH

The Mysterious J said:
This still didn't quite work. Using format [hh]:mm and entering the value 24
still converted the 24 into 01/24/1900 12:00 a.m., only now the display shows
576:00 - because 24 days into the century meant 576 hours had passed. Is
there something else I should be changing to get the value 24 to show as 24
hours, and not 24 days?

Fred Smith said:
To get 24:00 displayed, you need a format of [hh]:mm, not hh:mm.

However, I doubt that's your problem. To get the results you are showing,
someone must have entered 24, as opposed to 24:00, which Excel interpreted
as 24 days, rather than 24 hours. Correct the data entry, and you should be
fine.

Regards,
Fred.

The Mysterious J said:
In some worksheets, a cell formatted hh:mm with a value of 24 will yield
the
desired result - 24:00 (24 hours). As of today some worksheets are
yielding
00:00 for the same value of 24, and in the formula bar, you can see that
the
24 has been converted to 1/24/1900 12:00:00AM - the 24th day of the
century.
How can this be corrected so that it will show 24 hours.
 
F

Fred Smith

No. As you found out, Excel interprets 24 as 24 days. For Excel to recognize
an entry as a time, you must include a colon. Your choices are:

1. Enter the colon.
2. Divide the entry by 24 (the number of hours in a day)
3. Write a macro which converts 24 days into 24 hours.

Regards,
Fred.

The Mysterious J said:
This still didn't quite work. Using format [hh]:mm and entering the value
24
still converted the 24 into 01/24/1900 12:00 a.m., only now the display
shows
576:00 - because 24 days into the century meant 576 hours had passed. Is
there something else I should be changing to get the value 24 to show as
24
hours, and not 24 days?

Fred Smith said:
To get 24:00 displayed, you need a format of [hh]:mm, not hh:mm.

However, I doubt that's your problem. To get the results you are showing,
someone must have entered 24, as opposed to 24:00, which Excel
interpreted
as 24 days, rather than 24 hours. Correct the data entry, and you should
be
fine.

Regards,
Fred.

The Mysterious J said:
In some worksheets, a cell formatted hh:mm with a value of 24 will
yield
the
desired result - 24:00 (24 hours). As of today some worksheets are
yielding
00:00 for the same value of 24, and in the formula bar, you can see
that
the
24 has been converted to 1/24/1900 12:00:00AM - the 24th day of the
century.
How can this be corrected so that it will show 24 hours.
 
T

The Mysterious J

Perfect! Thank you. It also makes sense why we just ran into this problem now
- most of our services are in minutes (0:60, 0:15, 0:45, 1:30, et cetera).
This only came up because it was for inpatient services, which are 24-hour
services. I'll pass it on to my team.

Fred Smith said:
No. As you found out, Excel interprets 24 as 24 days. For Excel to recognize
an entry as a time, you must include a colon. Your choices are:

1. Enter the colon.
2. Divide the entry by 24 (the number of hours in a day)
3. Write a macro which converts 24 days into 24 hours.

Regards,
Fred.

The Mysterious J said:
This still didn't quite work. Using format [hh]:mm and entering the value
24
still converted the 24 into 01/24/1900 12:00 a.m., only now the display
shows
576:00 - because 24 days into the century meant 576 hours had passed. Is
there something else I should be changing to get the value 24 to show as
24
hours, and not 24 days?

Fred Smith said:
To get 24:00 displayed, you need a format of [hh]:mm, not hh:mm.

However, I doubt that's your problem. To get the results you are showing,
someone must have entered 24, as opposed to 24:00, which Excel
interpreted
as 24 days, rather than 24 hours. Correct the data entry, and you should
be
fine.

Regards,
Fred.

message In some worksheets, a cell formatted hh:mm with a value of 24 will
yield
the
desired result - 24:00 (24 hours). As of today some worksheets are
yielding
00:00 for the same value of 24, and in the formula bar, you can see
that
the
24 has been converted to 1/24/1900 12:00:00AM - the 24th day of the
century.
How can this be corrected so that it will show 24 hours.
 
J

Julia Sheppard

Hello, I've just read your post wanting to know how to insert various 24hr
times in hours & minutes.
I need to record in excel a start time a finish time & the difference ( hrs
worked). I see your problem was solved but for the life of me I don't
understand the solution. I'd be ever so grateful if you help me or even
better send me a copy of a basic spreadsheet.
My email address is: (e-mail address removed)
Thanks ever so much in advance for any help you can give me.

The Mysterious J said:
Perfect! Thank you. It also makes sense why we just ran into this problem now
- most of our services are in minutes (0:60, 0:15, 0:45, 1:30, et cetera).
This only came up because it was for inpatient services, which are 24-hour
services. I'll pass it on to my team.

Fred Smith said:
No. As you found out, Excel interprets 24 as 24 days. For Excel to recognize
an entry as a time, you must include a colon. Your choices are:

1. Enter the colon.
2. Divide the entry by 24 (the number of hours in a day)
3. Write a macro which converts 24 days into 24 hours.

Regards,
Fred.

The Mysterious J said:
This still didn't quite work. Using format [hh]:mm and entering the value
24
still converted the 24 into 01/24/1900 12:00 a.m., only now the display
shows
576:00 - because 24 days into the century meant 576 hours had passed. Is
there something else I should be changing to get the value 24 to show as
24
hours, and not 24 days?

:

To get 24:00 displayed, you need a format of [hh]:mm, not hh:mm.

However, I doubt that's your problem. To get the results you are showing,
someone must have entered 24, as opposed to 24:00, which Excel
interpreted
as 24 days, rather than 24 hours. Correct the data entry, and you should
be
fine.

Regards,
Fred.

message In some worksheets, a cell formatted hh:mm with a value of 24 will
yield
the
desired result - 24:00 (24 hours). As of today some worksheets are
yielding
00:00 for the same value of 24, and in the formula bar, you can see
that
the
24 has been converted to 1/24/1900 12:00:00AM - the 24th day of the
century.
How can this be corrected so that it will show 24 hours.
 

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