Difference between revisions of "Manuals/calci/LENB"

From ZCubes Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 11: Line 11:
 
*LENB() counts 2 byte per character when default language is set as Double-byte Character Set (DBCS). Else LENB() counts 1 byte per character similar to LEN.
 
*LENB() counts 2 byte per character when default language is set as Double-byte Character Set (DBCS). Else LENB() counts 1 byte per character similar to LEN.
 
*Languages such as Japanese, Chinese, Korean etc support DBCS.
 
*Languages such as Japanese, Chinese, Korean etc support DBCS.
*<math>txt</math> can be any string containing characters, numbers, symbols, blankspaces etc.
+
*<math>txt</math> can be any string containing characters, numbers, symbols, blank spaces etc.
 
*If argument <math>txt</math> is directly entered in the command, it should be enclosed in double quotes (e.g. "Name").
 
*If argument <math>txt</math> is directly entered in the command, it should be enclosed in double quotes (e.g. "Name").
  
Line 25: Line 25:
  
 
|- class="odd"
 
|- class="odd"
| class="sshl_f" |
+
| class="sshl_f" | ***
 
| class=" " |
 
| class=" " |
 
| class=" " |
 
| class=" " |

Revision as of 10:41, 13 January 2014

LENB(txt)

  • where, is a text string whose length is to be determined.

LENB() returns the number of bytes used to represent characters in a text string.

Description

LENB(txt)

  • LENB() counts 2 byte per character when default language is set as Double-byte Character Set (DBCS). Else LENB() counts 1 byte per character similar to LEN.
  • Languages such as Japanese, Chinese, Korean etc support DBCS.
  • can be any string containing characters, numbers, symbols, blank spaces etc.
  • If argument is directly entered in the command, it should be enclosed in double quotes (e.g. "Name").

Examples

ABC#DEF
***
1 3.123
=LENB(A1) : Calculates the number of characters in a string referenced to cell A1. Displays 7 as the output. Character '#' is also counted.
=LENB(A3) : Calculates the number of characters in a string referenced to cell A3. Displays 7 as the output. Space and decimal point are also counted.
=LENB("<!#!>") : Displays 5 as the output.

See Also

References