To make a long story short, I use a large Excel formula (about 3,000 characters in length) to put numerous rows of data into a format that allows me to insert directly into a database. I have to do this due to limitations at work. I am adding on to this formula, and am running into an issue where one of my new columns require varying amounts of text to be used.
If there is no text in this field, I then need the output to be NULL. If there is text, I need to print the text with single quotes surrounding it. This is the way I need it to work due to the way the data is exported into Excel from our program.
The [@[Callback Result]] below references the name of one of my columns so the formula can grow dynamically by targeting the value of that column in the current row.
Code snippet:
IF([@[Callback Result]]="",TEXT("NULL",""),TEXT("'"&[@[Callback Result]]&"'",""))
Output if the cell is blank: NULL
Output if the cell has 253 characters or less: 'Whatever text I want to type that takes up to 253 characters with single quotes surrounding it'
Output if the cell has over 253 characters: #VALUE! (caused by the formula throwing an error in the value.)
I have used this strategy for many other columns within the spreadsheet that require there to be a NULL printed if the targeted cell is blank, but I have never run into a situation where I have needed to use more than 253 characters (including spaces).
If anyone can provide any insight, I would greatly appreciate it as I can find no documentation explaining limitations of the TEXT function. I use a more simplified version of code (shown below) that does not require a NULL check, and it pulls in very large sets of text just fine by using:
"'"&[@Transcription]&"', "
I would prefer not to have to limit the amount of characters being input into the field, but will if there is no other way.
Sorry if my explanation is too lengthy. I couldn't think of a way to shorten my thoughts. Please let me know your thoughts or if I need to clarify anything below.