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I have an Excel spreadsheet with 1 column, 700 rows. I care about every seventh line. I don't want to have to go in and delete the 6 rows between each row I care about. So my solution was to create another sheet and specify a reference to each cell I want.

=sheet1!a1
=sheet1!a8
=sheet1!a15

But I don't want to type in each of these formulas ... `100 times.I thought if I selected the three and dragged the box around, it would understand what I was trying to do, but no luck.

Any ideas on how to do this elegantly/efficiently?

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4 Answers

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In A1 of your new sheet, put this:

=OFFSET(Sheet1!$A$1,(ROW()-1)*7,0)

... and copy down. If you start somewhere other than row 1, change ROW() to ROW(A1) or some other cell on row 1, then copy down again.

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Nice. Worked like a charm. Thanks. – Adrian Wible Oct 18 '08 at 3:30
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If I were confronted with extracting every 7th row I would “insert” a column before Column “A” . I would then (assuming that there is a header row in row 1) type in the numbers 1,2,3,4,5,6,7 in rows 2,3,4,5,6,7,8, I would highlight the 1,2,3,4,5,6,7 and paste that block to the end of the sheet (700 rows worth). The result will be 1,23,4,5,6,7,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,1,2,3,4,5,6,7……. Now do a data sort ascending on column “A”. After the sort all of the 1’s will be the first in the series, all of the 7’s will be the seventh item.

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Great. Thanks. Straightforward and avoids macros... something that I should have specified. The offset solution was a bit more elegant, but this approach would have been just peachy. Thanks again. – Adrian Wible Oct 18 '08 at 3:32
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Create a macro and use the following code to grab the data and put it in a new sheet (Sheet2):

Dim strValue As String
Dim strCellNum As String
Dim x As String
x = 1

For i = 1 To 700 Step 7
    strCellNum = "A" & i
    strValue = Worksheets("Sheet1").Range(strCellNum).Value
    Debug.Print strValue
    Worksheets("Sheet2").Range("A" & x).Value = strValue
    x = x + 1
Next

Let me know if this helps! JFV

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Sorry I didn't notice you'd already posted an answer. – Account deleted Oct 17 '08 at 4:50
Looks like it'd work. I should have specified that I would prefer to avoid macros. Thanks for the submission... next time I'll have to dust off my VBA book to consider solutions. – Adrian Wible Oct 18 '08 at 3:34
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Add new column and fill it with ascending numbers. Then filter by ([column] mod 7 = 0) or something like that (don't have Excel in front of me to actually try this);

If you can't filter by formula, add one more column and use the formula =MOD([column; 7]) in it then filter zeros and you'll get all seventh rows.

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