Jun 23, 2020 11:23 AM
I am looking to take a long string of comma separated numbers (it is a string from a look up). Here is an example of numbers to summarize:
1.17-01, 1.17-02, 1.17-03, 1.17-04, 1.17-05, 1.17-06, 1.17-07, 1.17-08, 1.17-09, 1.17-10, 1.17-11, 1.17-12, 1.17-13, 1.17-14, 1.17-17, 1.17-18, 1.33-01, 1.33-02, 1.33-03, 1.33-04, 1.33-05, 1.33-07, 1.33-08, 1.33-09, 1.33-10, 1.33-11, 1.33-12, 1.33-13, 1.33-14, 1.33-15, 1.33-16, 1.33-17
If you look closely, there are missing numbers. I am hoping to find a formula that will output:
1.17-01 --> 1.17-14, 1.17-17, 1.17-18, 1.33-01, --> 1.33-05, 1.33-07, --> 1.33-17
I am flexible on the “–>”, but as you can see a simple dash won’t work, because dashes exist in the numbers. Has anyone seen something like this before? Any help would be greatly appreciated!!
Solved! Go to Solution.
Jun 26, 2020 10:09 AM
Actually, I found a way to do this with a simple formula:
LEFT(
SUBSTITUTE(
{Input Components Condensed},
‘\n’,
', ’
),
LEN(SUBSTITUTE(
{Input Components Condensed},
‘\n’,
', ’
)
)-2
)
Thanks!
Jun 26, 2020 11:28 AM
You’re welcome and non taken. This is the world of fluid requirements because often we don’t know what’s possible.
But it also underscores the need for detailed requirements; we all agree they are beneficial, but the time it takes to think through all of the nuances is typically where developers and domain experts lunge forward without a clear pathway and outcome in mind.