wow... I had never used that function before...
>
> I am not quite there yet, however, but at least this is a path. Here is an
> example of one of the strings
>
> Date:20220302 Time:1631 PM1.0:000 PM2.5:000 PM10:000 CO2:0010 HCHO:0.001
> TVOC:0.000 >0.3DustNum:00000 >0.5DustNum:00000 >1.0DustNum:00000
> >2.5DustNum:00000 >5.0DustNum:00000 >10DustNum:00000
>
> Using the expression as you wrote it, I get fields, like this:
> Date 20220302 Time 1631 PM1.0 000 PM2.5 000 PM10 000 CO2 0010 HCHO 0.001
> TVOC 0.000 >0.3DustNum 00000 >0.5DustNum 00000 >1.0DustNum 00000
> >2.5DustNum 00000 >5.0DustNum 00000 >10DustNum 00000 and then I could
> name the columns and delete the columns with the variable names.
>
> I will have to study that function... thanks.
>



> On Sun, Mar 13, 2022 at 8:41 AM David Lynch <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>> On 13/03/2022 12:04, Rogier F. van Vlissingen wrote:
>> > Var1: value1 Var2: value2 Var3: value 3 ... Var10: value10
>>
>> Place the strings in column 1 than put
>>
>> =REGEX($A1,"(?<=^| |:)[^ ]+?(?=:| |$)",,COLUMN()-1)
>>
>> in column 2 and drag right for ten columns and down.
>>
>> David Lynch
>>
>>

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