Difference between revisions of "Manuals/calci/DAYSBETWEENBASIS"

From ZCubes Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 16: Line 16:
 
*<math>SD</math> date should be &lt; <math>ED</math>, else Calci displays NaN error message.
 
*<math>SD</math> date should be &lt; <math>ED</math>, else Calci displays NaN error message.
 
*<math>basis</math> value is optional. If omitted, Calci assumes it to be 0.  
 
*<math>basis</math> value is optional. If omitted, Calci assumes it to be 0.  
 +
*We can use the DD/MM/YYYY format also. For Example:"14/5/2005[DD/MM/YYYY]".
 +
 
Below table shows the use of <math>basis</math> values:
 
Below table shows the use of <math>basis</math> values:
  
Line 61: Line 63:
 
  =DAYSBETWEENBASIS(DATE(2014,1,1),DATE(2014,4,1)) : Calculates the days between the dates mentioned. <br/>Returns '''90''' as a result.
 
  =DAYSBETWEENBASIS(DATE(2014,1,1),DATE(2014,4,1)) : Calculates the days between the dates mentioned. <br/>Returns '''90''' as a result.
 
  =DAYSBETWEENBASIS(DATE(2014,1,1),DATE(2015,4,1)) : Calculates the days between the dates mentioned. <br/>Returns '''450''' as a result.
 
  =DAYSBETWEENBASIS(DATE(2014,1,1),DATE(2015,4,1)) : Calculates the days between the dates mentioned. <br/>Returns '''450''' as a result.
 +
=DAYSBETWEENBASIS("17/6/2004[DD/MM/YYYY]","21/5/2006[DD/MM/YYYY]")= 694
  
 
==Related Videos==
 
==Related Videos==

Revision as of 14:37, 22 May 2018

DAYSBETWEENBASIS(SD, ED, basis)

where

  • represents a start date,
  • represents an end date, and
  • is the type of day count basis to use.

DAYSBETWEENBASIS() calculates the number of days between start date and end date with respect to the count basis factor.

Description

DAYSBETWEENBASIS(SD, ED, basis)

  • DAYSBETWEENBASIS() returns the number of days from specified start date to end date.
  • and dates should be entered either in 'date format' or 'dates returned using formulas'. If dates are not valid, Calci displays #N/A error message.
  • date should be < , else Calci displays NaN error message.
  • value is optional. If omitted, Calci assumes it to be 0.
  • We can use the DD/MM/YYYY format also. For Example:"14/5/2005[DD/MM/YYYY]".

Below table shows the use of values:

Basis Description
0 US (NASD) 30/360
1 Actual/actual
2 Actual/360
3 Actual/365
4 European 30/360
  • If value is other than 0 to 4, Calci displays #N/A error message.
  • We can use Range values also. For Example: DAYSBETWEENBASIS(#1/1/2014-2/1/2014,"4/1/2014").
  • #date notation needs mm/dd/yy format .

Examples

DAYSBETWEENBASIS(SD, ED, basis) function with inputs in order is calculated as follows:

1/4/2008
10/10/2008
4
=DAYSBETWEENBASIS(A1,A2,A3) : Calculates the days between the dates mentioned with the inputs 
in the range A1 to A3 with basis count factor '4'. Returns 276 as a result. =DAYSBETWEENBASIS(DATE(2014,1,1),DATE(2014,4,1)) : Calculates the days between the dates mentioned.
Returns 90 as a result. =DAYSBETWEENBASIS(DATE(2014,1,1),DATE(2015,4,1)) : Calculates the days between the dates mentioned.
Returns 450 as a result. =DAYSBETWEENBASIS("17/6/2004[DD/MM/YYYY]","21/5/2006[DD/MM/YYYY]")= 694

Related Videos

YEARFRAC

See Also

References