4

Today is 02/27/2013 which is Wensday. I need formula which will return me date for previous Monday.which would be (02/17/2013)

I need to so I can use for file name or email subject in my vba code which sends emails.

With oMail
     'Uncomment the line below to hard code a recipient
     .To = "[email protected]"
     'Uncomment the line below to hard code a subject
     .Subject = "Current Report"
     .Attachments.Add WB.FullName
    .Display
End With
4
  • Well, what have you tried so far? If you haven't tried anything, then perhaps this will get you started: msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa227527(v=vs.60).aspx
    – StoriKnow
    Feb 27, 2013 at 16:05
  • @Sam, your link is missing a closing parenthesis. Feb 27, 2013 at 16:07
  • @DougGlancy is it? It works for me. I couldn't use the built in SO link functionality because the MSDN link contains parenthesis in itself. Did you maybe see it before I made the edit?
    – StoriKnow
    Feb 27, 2013 at 16:12
  • @Sam,that's right. I did. Feb 27, 2013 at 16:22

4 Answers 4

15
Public Function LastMonday(pdat As Date) As Date
    LastMonday = DateAdd("ww", -1, pdat - (Weekday(pdat, vbMonday) - 1))
End Function

Weekday(yourdate, vbMonday) returns a 1 for Monday, 2 for Tuesday, etc. so

pdat - (Weekday(pdat, vbMonday) - 1)

Will give us the most recent Monday by subtracting the Weekday()-1 # of days from the passed date.

DateAdd("ww", -1, ...)

subtracts one week from that date.

LastMonday(cdate("2/27/13"))

Returns 2/18/2013 (which is Monday, not the 17th)

2
  • Hi, How can I use this ? do I enter =DateAdd("01/01/2013") ?
    – Mowgli
    Feb 27, 2013 at 17:30
  • 1
    If you include the function in your VBA module, then you can do something like this: strSubject = "Today's subject is about last Monday (" & Format(LastMonday(Date), "mm/dd/yyyy") & ")" With oMail .Subject = strSubject End With Feb 27, 2013 at 17:39
2

Calculate the difference between Weekday(Now()) and 2 (= weekday for monday), then add 7.

4
  • Are you sure that will return previous Monday - not the next one?
    – Peter L.
    Feb 27, 2013 at 16:59
  • Peter, I should have been more specific. If you add the difference to 7 and THEN substract that from today, you should end up with the previous Monday! Feb 27, 2013 at 17:14
  • edited this answer to include a concrete example (in-cell calculation) after spending a few minutes figuring it out myself. "=TODAY()-(WEEKDAY(TODAY(),3)+7)"
    – goofology
    Sep 13, 2017 at 2:06
  • also: =TODAY()-WEEKDAY(TODAY(),3)-7 (removed 2 parentheses)
    – goofology
    Sep 13, 2017 at 2:15
1

Dan's answer should cover your needs in VBA

or in Excel worksheet formula, you could do something like this:

    =TEXT(DateCell- (WEEKDAY(DateCell,2)-1),"dddd mmmm dd")

so DateCell is a range containing the date that you want to find the date of the previous Monday!

so if you put 08/04/2012 in DateCell, then that formula will retrun Monday 2nd April!

(credit to MrExcel.com and Google search!) HTH Philip

0

To make the accepted answer's function a bit more versatile, a couple of minor changes lets you specify which day of week, and how far back/forward you want it.

Public Function LastDow(pdat As Date, dow as integer, _&
                optional weeksOffset = -1 as integer) As Date
    LastDow = DateAdd("ww", weeksOffset, pdat - (Weekday(pdat, dow) - 1))
End Function

With this function you can get, say, the next Wednesday:

dim myDt as date
dim nextWed as date
myDt = now()
// Get next Wednesday (dow = Wednesday, weeksOffset is +1
x = LastDow(myDt, vbWednesday, 1)

Thanks again to the original solution author (Dan Meltheus).

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