Search results
4 cze 2002 · The "pass through millisecond format" is a good way to do this. But for general information, the custom format .000 will return a time in seconds with decimal seconds, such that half of 1 hour, 3 seconds will be shown as 1801.500.
I get a number from an app that represents seconds and decimal fraction of seconds, for example, 2920.254943. I'd like Excel to format it as h:mm:ss.th. I see how to format as h:mm:ss via =TIME (TRUNC (B23/3600),TRUNC (B23/60),MOD (B23,60)) and then use a custom time format h:mm:ss.
14 wrz 2011 · fractions of a second with >3 places past decimal. I have a time of say, 00:02.1234567 (7 places past decimal) and I can only get it to display 3 places using D:hh:mm:ss.000. If I use more than 3 0s past the decimal, it tells me that the format is wrong. Can't use #s either.
26 kwi 2012 · Since the FB does not show fractional seconds, we are forced to remember and retype the entire fractional seconds. For example, if we enter 8:30.123 formatted as Custom [m]:ss.000, we will see 12:08:30 AM in the FB.
4 mar 2007 · For people who need to record fractional seconds easily and reliably, it might be worth considering using Gnumeric.
When you have times in Excel that contain hundredths of a second, how can you extract seconds including any fractional part? This is a puzzling problem. Although Excel offers the SECOND function to extract seconds from a time, SECOND will round fractional seconds to the nearest whole number .
20 lut 2003 · If I enter 1:32:15.015 in a cell formated as "hh:mm:ss.000" it will display up to three decimal places in the seconds value (ie, thousandths of a second). If I enter =time (1,32,15.015) in the same cell, it displays "1:32:15.000" - it seems that the time function may return only integer seconds.