Author Topic: Searching Excel files  (Read 2101 times)

Offline Jack W

  • TS Addict
  • *****
  • Posts: 2597
    • View Profile
Searching Excel files
« on: November 23, 2009, 05:53:23 PM »
I am using Office X

I have Excel files that I want to search for character strings.
The files each include a whole bunch of monthly spreadsheets in Tabs.

The tabs are monthly financial spreadsheets.

Some items get paid annually, or only once every few years.

Is there a way I can tell Excel to search all of these sub files for the character string?

Or do I have to select each tab in the spreadsheet and do individual searches?

What a pain-in-the-neck (or other parts of the anatomy) to have to do this!

Please tell me there is a way to shortcut. rolleyes.gif

Thanks

- Jack
Good to be Here.

My Macs: 2010 27" alum iMac 2.8GHz, Snow Leopard 10.6.8/Mavericks 10.9.5, 4GB SDRAM (Workhorse),
13” Late 2010 MacBook Pro 2.4GHz, 10.6.8, 2GB SDRAM,
(2) External HD - Firewire/USB Macally Enclosures  with 1TB Hitachi Drives,
Time Machine external drive - ditto above - 1/2 TimeMac

Offline Xairbusdriver

  • Administrator
  • TS Addict
  • *****
  • Posts: 26388
  • 27" iMac (mid-17), Big Sur, Mac mini, Catalina
    • View Profile
    • Mid-South Weather
Searching Excel files
« Reply #1 on: November 23, 2009, 06:09:02 PM »
QUOTE
What a pain-in-the-neck (or other parts of the anatomy) to have to do this!
Are you saying that Excel cannot search for text, even in a formula?! eek2.gif Your "pain-in-the-neck" is why most of us use a financial program for financial matters. Especially ones that pay/post these types of things automatically, no matter what the schedule. tongue.gif Well worth the money to pay a developer for doing the "pain-in-the-neck" stuff! yes.gif Save the spreadsheet for whatever they are good for, if you can find one! eek2.gif

But, you could probably download Text Wrangler, a free and extremely powerful text processor and use its search functions. That and a few AppleScripts could probably also make the correct tab open for you. dntknw.gif

What it sounds like you are doing is a perfect use for a database, also. And all those, that I know about, will have extremely good search functions built in. dntknw.gif Of course, they will usually cost more than Quicken...
THERE ARE TWO TYPES OF COUNTRIES
Those that use metric = #1 Measurement system
And the United States = The Banana system
CAUTION! Childhood vaccinations cause adults! :yes:

Offline Jack W

  • TS Addict
  • *****
  • Posts: 2597
    • View Profile
Searching Excel files
« Reply #2 on: November 23, 2009, 07:07:35 PM »
Jim,

Excel does a fine job for what I am using it for.

Simple for simple minds like mine. (This will certainly draw comments). toothgrin.gif

I sure don't need a database program for what I am doing.

I only would like an easier method of searching.
« Last Edit: November 23, 2009, 07:08:22 PM by Jack W »
Good to be Here.

My Macs: 2010 27" alum iMac 2.8GHz, Snow Leopard 10.6.8/Mavericks 10.9.5, 4GB SDRAM (Workhorse),
13” Late 2010 MacBook Pro 2.4GHz, 10.6.8, 2GB SDRAM,
(2) External HD - Firewire/USB Macally Enclosures  with 1TB Hitachi Drives,
Time Machine external drive - ditto above - 1/2 TimeMac

Offline kbeartx

  • TS Addict
  • Posts: 6772
    • View Profile
    • http://
Searching Excel files
« Reply #3 on: November 23, 2009, 07:23:06 PM »
IIRC, the Finder search function [Cmd-F] can search inside files for occurrences of specified text.  

I've never used that feature mice-elf, but I wonder if you've tried that, and whether it will produce the results you seek?

Kb cool.gif
« Last Edit: November 23, 2009, 07:24:18 PM by kbeartx »