A site for solving at least some of your technical problems...
A site for solving at least some of your technical problems...
Today I was working on a spreadsheet where I added a time for a calendar type of sheet.
What I wanted to do is have a column where time increases without having to type each time manually.
So I needed to add 15 or 30 minutes to the first time.
Say my first time is 7am, it appears as 07:00:00 AM.
In the next row (B4), I wanted to do something like:
=B3+"15 minutes"
The fact is that LibreOffice saves time and date as a double number where 1.0 represents 1 day.
So to add just 15 minutes, you need to divide your number by the number of minutes in a day:
=B3+15/60/24
Or if you prefer, you could write it this way:
=B3+15/(60*24)
Similarly, you could add seconds by dividing by another 60. Here I would be adding 5 seconds:
=B3+5/(60*60*24)
Note that this is quite different from the usual Unix timestamp which uses 1 second as its increment value.
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