Microsoft KB Archive/126931

= Sorting Alphanumeric Text as Numeric Values =

Article ID: 126931

Article Last Modified on 1/31/2007

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APPLIES TO


 * Microsoft Excel 97 Standard Edition
 * Microsoft Excel 95 Standard Edition
 * Microsoft Excel 5.0 Standard Edition

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This article was previously published under Q126931





SUMMARY
In Microsoft Excel, a value formatted as a number will be sorted differently than a number formatted as text. Because of this difference, you may receive unexpected results when you mix numeric and text strings in a sort.



CAUSE
When Microsoft Excel sorts text, it does so one character at a time from left to right. For example, if you sort the values 1 and 1A, when these values are formatted as text, the text with the fewest number of characters is at the top (1) of the sorted values, while text with the greatest number of characters is at the bottom (1A). Each character is then sorted from 0 to 9 and then from A to Z.

For example, suppose you have the following values in a worksheet:

A1: 1

A2: 12

A3: 1A1

A4: 1A2

A5: 2

The desired sort result is 1, 1A1, 1A2, 2, 12. However, the actual result will be 1, 2, 12, 1A1, 1A2.



WORKAROUND
Microsoft provides programming examples for illustration only, without warranty either expressed or implied. This includes, but is not limited to, the implied warranties of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose. This article assumes that you are familiar with the programming language that is being demonstrated and with the tools that are used to create and to debug procedures. Microsoft support engineers can help explain the functionality of a particular procedure, but they will not modify these examples to provide added functionality or construct procedures to meet your specific requirements. To achieve the desired sort result, use the following Visual Basic custom function.

Sample Visual Basic Procedure
Type the following code in a Visual Basic module: ' Assume a cell entry of 1A 'myvalue' is the cell reference of the ' number to be sorted. Function numsort(myvalue As Variant)

' Calculates the function any time the worksheet recalculates. Application.Volatile

' Initializes the variable count as 0. Count = 0

' If the cell is numeric, the variable 'count' is equal to the value ' in the cell times 1000. ' 1A is not numeric If IsNumeric(myvalue) Then Count = myvalue * 1000 Else no_text_yet = True ' Sets a For-Next loop from 1 to the length of characters in the ' cell. ' With 1A, the For-next loop will be from 1 to 2. For x = 1 To Len(myvalue) ' Sets the variable 'current' to the character of position x,           ' for a length of 1 character. ' The first time through, 'current' will equal 1. ' The second time through, 'current' will equal A.           current = Mid(myvalue, x, 1) If IsNumeric(current) Then ' If 'current' is numeric, then 'count' is equal to itself ' times ten plus 'current'. ' The first time through, 'count' is numeric and will equal ' 1.              ' (0 * 1 + 1).               ' The second time through, A is not numeric. Count = Count * 10 + current ' If 'current' is not numeric, then 'count' is equal to itself ' times 1000 plus the ASCII value of the letter. ' The first time through, 1 is numeric. ' The second time through, 'count' equals itself(1) times 1000 ' + the ASCII character value of A(65), or 1065 Else Count = Count * 1000 + Asc(current) ' Exits the For-Next loop as soon as we reach the first alpha ' character Exit For End If     Next ' If the For-Next loop variable is not equal to the length of     ' characters of myvalue then the last characters must be calculated. If x <> Len(myvalue) Then Count = _ Count + Right(myvalue, Len(myvalue) - x) * 0.001 ' This will happen as soon as we encounter the first alpha ' character. In this is the case, 'count' equals itself plus the ' right character of the total length minus the For-Next variable ' "x". End If     numsort = Count End Function

To Use the Custom Function
 Type the following in a worksheet:

A1: 1

A2: 12

A3: 1A1

A4: 1A2

A5: 2

 Select the range A1:A5, and click Sort on the Data menu. Under My List Has, click No Header Row, and Sort By Column A in ascending order. The worksheet will be sorted as follows:

A1: 1

A2: 2

A3: 12

A4: 1A1

A5: 1A2

 Enter the following formula into cell B1:

B1: =numsort(A1)

NOTE: This should return a numeric value of 1000 for the number 1 in cell A1. With cell B1 selected, click Copy on the Edit menu. Select cells B2:B5 and click Paste on the Edit menu.

The worksheet should have the following information in it:

A1: 1 B1: 1000

A2: 2 B2: 2000

A3: 12 B3: 12000

A4: 1A1 B4: 1065.001

A5: 1A2 B5: 1065.002

</li> Select the range A1:B5, and click Sort on the Data menu. Under My List Has, click No Header Row, and Sort By Column B in ascending order. The sort should return the following:

A1: 1 B1: 1000

A2: 1A1 B2: 1065.001

A3: 1A2 B3: 1065.002

A4: 2 B4: 2000

A5: 12 B5: 12000

</li></ol>

Additional query words: 5.0 5.00a 5.00c 8.00 97 sort weird wrong incorrect XL5 XL95 XL97 alpha-numeric XL

Keywords: kbdtacode kbprb KB126931

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