The information in this article applies to:
SYMPTOMS
In the versions of Microsoft Excel listed above, the Visual Basic DateValue
function does not accept a date literal (for example, #8/12/71#) as an
argument.
MORE INFORMATIONIn Visual Basic Help, the following information is contained in the entry for the DateValue function: The 'date' named argument is normally a string expression representing a date from January 1, 100 through December 31, 9999. However, 'date' can also be any expression that can represent a date, a time, or both a date and time, in that range.The last sentence of this entry is only partially correct. The DateValue function does not accept a date literal in the #<date># format. If you attempt to use a date literal in the DateValue function, you receive the error message and your subroutine does not run. The DateValue function accepts only strings that represent dates ("July 4, 1776", "1-Jan-95", "9/1/94", and so on) or other functions that return the same type of information [the DATE() function, the NOW() function, and so on]. Additional query words: 5.00a 5.00c 7.00a XL7 XL5
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