349

How can I construct the following string in an Excel formula:

Maurice "The Rocket" Richard

If I'm using single quotes, it's trivial: ="Maurice 'The Rocket' Richard" but what about double quotes?

13 Answers 13

512

Have you tried escaping with an additional double-quote? By escaping a character, you are telling Excel to treat the " character as literal text.

= "Maurice ""The Rocket"" Richard"
0
175

Alternatively, you can use the CHAR function:

= "Maurice " & CHAR(34) & "Rocket" & CHAR(34) & " Richard"
3
  • 5
    This works more consistently for me than "" Maybe it's just because I have Mac Excel 2011 Jan 4, 2013 at 0:29
  • 5
    @Ivanoats: Nope, it's not a Mac thing (using Windows here) - this does work more consistently; in my case, concatenating using & with a double quote just before or just after the ampersand didn't work using the double-double-quote method. Jun 24, 2015 at 7:57
  • Works more consistently for me, as I often need to wrap quotation marks around a complicated string built up of multiple concatenated fields with interspersed punctuation. In my most recent case, to come up with something like this: "NameOfLocation, Street Address, City, State Zip" Sep 11, 2015 at 14:23
25

Three double quotes: " " " x " " " = "x" Excel will auto change to one double quote. e.g.:

=CONCATENATE("""x"""," hi")  

= "x" hi

4
  • 1
    If this would be true, then please elaborate on the outcome of =concatenate("a"""b"). According to your observation, the outcome would be a"b. This is not the case. In fact this expression will not even be accepted by Excel.
    – wh81752
    May 20, 2015 at 15:11
  • 1
    you forgot the comma
    – KiwiSteve
    Feb 21, 2016 at 19:42
  • 2
    The outer quotes in your example are just starting and ending the string. "" creates a quote character, not """.
    – Ben I.
    Oct 13, 2016 at 15:13
  • 1
    Two double-quotes will auto change to one double-quote: =CONCATENATE("<""x"">"," hi") -> <"x"> hi
    – mwfearnley
    Aug 27, 2020 at 10:48
7

I use a function for this (if the workbook already has VBA).

Function Quote(inputText As String) As String
  Quote = Chr(34) & inputText & Chr(34)
End Function

This is from Sue Mosher's book "Microsoft Outlook Programming". Then your formula would be:

="Maurice "&Quote("Rocket")&" Richard"

This is similar to what Dave DuPlantis posted.

7

In the event that you need to do this with JSON:

=CONCATENATE("'{""service"": { ""field"": "&A2&"}}'")
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  • 1
    Thank you! This totally helped me! I was struggling to properly format a JSON array in my cells.
    – Brian C
    Dec 30, 2015 at 21:38
  • 1
    Thanks, just what i needed :)
    – JimiSweden
    Nov 29, 2016 at 7:58
4

Use chr(34) Code:

    Joe = "Hi there, " & Chr(34) & "Joe" & Chr(34)
    ActiveCell.Value = Joe

Result:

    Hi there, "joe"
2

Concatenate " as a ceparate cell:

    A |   B   | C | D
1   " | text  | " | =CONCATENATE(A1; B1; C1);

D1 displays "text"
1

will this work for macros using .Formula = "=THEFORMULAFUNCTION("STUFF")" so it would be like: will this work for macros using .Formula = "=THEFORMULAFUNCTION(CHAR(34) & STUFF & CHAR(34))"

2
1

Returning an empty or zero-length string (e.g. "") to make a cell appear blank is a common practise in a worksheet formula but recreating that option when inserting the formula through the Range.Formula or Range.FormulaR1C1 property in VBA is unwieldy due to the necessity of having to double-up the double-quote characters within a quoted string.

The worksheet's native TEXT function can produce the same result without using quotes.

'formula to insert into C1 - =IF(A1<>"", B1, "")
range("C1").formula = "=IF(A1<>"""", B1, """")"         '<~quote chars doubled up
range("C1").formula = "=IF(A1<>TEXT(,), B1, TEXT(,))"   '<~with TEXT(,) instead

To my eye, using TEXT(,) in place of "" cleans up even a simple formula like the one above. The benefits become increasingly significant when used in more complicated formulas like the practise of appending an empty string to a VLOOKUP to avoid returning a zero to the cell when a lookup results in a blank or returning an empty string on no-match with IFERROR.

'formula to insert into D1 - =IFERROR(VLOOKUP(A1, B:C, 2, FALSE)&"", "")
range("D1").formula = "=IFERROR(VLOOKUP(A1, B:C, 2, FALSE)&"""", """")"
range("D1").formula = "=IFERROR(VLOOKUP(A1, B:C, 2, FALSE)&TEXT(,), TEXT(,))"

With TEXT(,) replacing the old "" method of delivering an empty string, you might get to stop using an abacus to determine whether you have the right number of quote characters in a formula string.

1
="Maurice "&"""TheRocker"""&" Richard"
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VBA Function

1) .Formula = "=""THEFORMULAFUNCTION ""&(CHAR(34) & ""STUFF"" & CHAR(34))"

2) .Formula = "THEFORMULAFUNCTION ""STUFF"""

The first method uses vba to write a formula in a cell which results in the calculated value:

 THEFORMULAFUNCTION "STUFF"

The second method uses vba to write a string in a cell which results in the value:

 THEFORMULAFUNCTION "STUFF"

Excel Result/Formula

1) ="THEFORMULAFUNCTION "&(CHAR(34) & "STUFF" & CHAR(34))

2) THEFORMULAFUNCTION "STUFF"

0
-1

There is another way, though more for " How can I construct the following string in an Excel formula: "Maurice "The Rocket" Richard" " than " How to create strings containing double quotes in Excel formulas? ", which is simply to use two single quotes:

SO216616 example

On the left is Calibri snipped from an Excel worksheet and on the right a snip from a VBA window. In my view escaping as mentioned by @YonahW wins 'hands down' but two single quotes is no more typing than two doubles and the difference is reasonably apparent in VBA without additional keystrokes while, potentially, not noticeable in a spreadsheet.

-1

The following formula works on Excel as well as Numbers (on MAC) :

= "Maurice " & """" & "The Rocket" & """" & " Richard"

Use & """" & to get a single double quote surrounding your string.

1
  • This is no different to the accepted answer, and add no additional value Mar 15, 2022 at 7:00

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