If your dates are text, then filtering to select ends with 11 should serve. If your dates are Date/Time serial numbers and you are using the 1904 date system then a Custom AutoFilter of is greater than or equal to 39082 And is less than 39447 should work. If neither suits then, if you data is in columnA starting with a label in A4, then the following formulae may suit: in A1 copied across to B1: =$A4 in A2: =1/1/11 in B2.
By Many of the worksheets that you create with Excel 2016 require the entry of a series of sequential dates or numbers. Excel’s AutoFill feature makes short work of this kind of repetitive task. All you have to enter is the starting value for the series. In most cases, AutoFill is smart enough to figure out how to fill out the series for you when you drag the fill handle to the right (to take the series across columns to the right) or down (to extend the series to the rows below). The AutoFill (or fill) handle looks like this — + — and appears only when you position the mouse on the lower-right corner of the active cell (or the last cell, when you’ve selected a block of cells).
If you drag a cell selection with the white-cross mouse pointer rather than the AutoFill handle, Excel simply extends the cell selection to those cells you drag through. If you drag a cell selection with the arrowhead pointer, Excel moves the cell selection. When creating a series with the fill handle, you can drag in only one direction at a time. As you drag the fill handle, the program keeps you informed of whatever entry will be entered into the last cell selected in the range by displaying that entry next to the mouse pointer (a kind of AutoFill tips, if you will).
After extending the range with the fill handle, Excel either creates a series in all of the cells that you select or copies the entire range with the initial value. To the right of the last entry in the filled or copied series, Excel also displays a drop-down button that contains a shortcut menu of options. You can use this shortcut menu to override Excel’s default filling or copying. You can use AutoFill to enter a row of months, starting with January in cell B2 and ending with June in cell G2. To do this, you simply enter Jan in cell B2 and then position the mouse pointer (or your finger or stylus) on the fill handle in the lower-right corner of this cell before you drag through to cell G2 on the right (as shown here). To enter a series of months, enter the first month and then drag the fill handle in a direction to add sequential months.
![Add 6 months to date in excel Add 6 months to date in excel](/uploads/1/2/5/3/125384126/440159846.jpg)
The Microsoft Excel MONTH function returns the month (a number from 1 to 12) given a date value. The MONTH function is a built-in function in Excel that is categorized as a Date/Time Function. It can be used as a worksheet function (WS) and a VBA function (VBA) in Excel. As a worksheet function, the MONTH function can be entered as.
When you release the mouse button or remove your finger or stylus from the touchscreen, Excel fills in the names of the rest of the months (Feb through Jun) in the selected cells (as shown here). Excel keeps the cells with the series of months selected, giving you another chance to modify the series. (If you went too far, you can drag the fill handle to the left to cut back on the list of months; if you didn’t go far enough, you can drag it to the right to extend the list of months farther.). Release the mouse button, and Excel fills the cell selection with the missing months. Also, you can use the options on the AutoFill Options drop-down menu shown. To display this menu, you click the drop-down button that appears on the fill handle (to the right of Jun) to override the series created by default. To have Excel copy Jan into each of the selected cells, choose Copy Cells on this menu.
To have the program fill the selected cells with the formatting used in cell B2 (in this case, the cell has had bold applied to it), you select Fill Formatting Only on this menu. To have Excel fill in the series of months in the selected cells without copying the formatting used in cell B2, you select the Fill Without Formatting command from this shortcut menu. Creating a custom company location list from a range of existing cell entries. Click in the Import List from Cells text box and then select the range of cells in the worksheet containing the custom list.
As soon as you start selecting the cells in the worksheet by dragging your mouse or Touch Pointer, Excel automatically collapses the Options dialog box to the minimum to get out of the way. The moment you release the mouse button or remove your finger or stylus from the screen, Excel automatically restores the Options dialog box to its normal size. Click the Import button to copy this list into the List Entries list box.
Skip to Step 6. Select the List Entries list box and then type each entry (in the desired order), being sure to press Enter after typing each one. When all the entries in the custom list appear in the List Entries list box in the order you want them, proceed to Step 5. Click the Add button to add the list of entries to the Custom Lists list box. Finish creating all the custom lists you need, using the preceding steps. When you’re done, move to Step 6.
Click OK twice, the first time to close the Options dialog box and the second to close the Excel Options dialog box and return to the current worksheet in the active workbook. After adding a custom list to Excel, from then on you need only enter the first entry in a cell and then use the fill handle to extend it to the cells below or to the right.