Difference between revisions of "Manuals/calci/MIDB"

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  =MIDB(A1,1,5) : Displays 5 character string in cell A1 starting from 1st position. Displays '''ABC D''' as the output. Space character is also included.
 
  =MIDB(A1,1,5) : Displays 5 character string in cell A1 starting from 1st position. Displays '''ABC D''' as the output. Space character is also included.
 
  =MIDB(A3,1,1) : Displays 1 character string in cell A3 starting from 1st position. Displays '''*''' as the output.
 
  =MIDB(A3,1,1) : Displays 1 character string in cell A3 starting from 1st position. Displays '''*''' as the output.
 +
<font color ="Red">Need to give examples with characters/language supporting DBCS </font>
 
    
 
    
 
== See Also ==
 
== See Also ==

Revision as of 16:12, 27 January 2014

MIDB(txt, snum, nob)

where,

  • is a text string containing the characters to be extracted,
  • is the starting position of the first character to be extracted, and
  • represents the number of characters to be displayed in bytes.

MIDB() displays a specific number of characters from a text string, with reference to the specified starting position and specified number of bytes.

Description

MIDB(txt, snum, nob)

e.g. MIDB("<#*>",1,2) displays <# as a result.

  • MIDB works with the languages that use 'Double Byte Character Set' (DBCS).
  • MIDB counts each double byte character as 2, when language is set to DBCS. Else it counts 1 byte per character.
  • If argument is directly entered in the command, it should be enclosed in double quotes (e.g. "Name").
  • should be > 1, else Calci displays #N/A error message.
  • If > 'length of text', Calci displays empty text ("").
  • If + > 'length of text', Calci displays the characters up to the end of text.
  • If is negative, Calci displays an #N/A error message.

Examples

ABC DEF
*123*123
=MIDB(A1,1,5) : Displays 5 character string in cell A1 starting from 1st position. Displays ABC D as the output. Space character is also included.
=MIDB(A3,1,1) : Displays 1 character string in cell A3 starting from 1st position. Displays * as the output.

Need to give examples with characters/language supporting DBCS

See Also

References