This tutorial details the syntax and advanced applications of Excel's FIND and SEARCH functions. Previous articles covered the basic Find and Replace dialog; this expands on using Excel to automatically locate and extract data based on specified criteria.
- Excel's SEARCH Function
- Key Differences: FIND vs. SEARCH
- Practical Formula Examples:
- Extracting Strings Before/After a Specific Character
- Locating the Nth Occurrence of a Character
- Extracting N Characters Following a Character
- Isolating Text Within Parentheses
Excel's FIND Function
The FIND function identifies the position of a character or substring within a text string.
Syntax:
FIND(find_text, within_text, [start_num])
- find_text: The character or substring to locate.
- within_text: The text string to search within (often a cell reference).
- start_num (optional): Specifies the starting character for the search (defaults to 1).
If find_text
isn't found, FIND returns a #VALUE! error.
For example, =FIND("d", "find")
returns 4. =FIND("a", "find")
returns an error.
Key Considerations for FIND:
- Case-sensitive: FIND is case-sensitive. Use SEARCH for case-insensitive searches.
- No wildcards: FIND doesn't support wildcard characters.
-
First occurrence only: FIND returns the position of the first occurrence of
find_text
. -
Empty string: If
find_text
is an empty string(""), FIND returns the position of the first character inwithin_text
. -
Error handling: #VALUE! is returned if
find_text
is not found,start_num
exceedswithin_text
length, orstart_num
is 0 or negative.
Excel's SEARCH Function
SEARCH is similar to FIND, returning the position of a substring.
Syntax:
SEARCH(find_text, within_text, [start_num])
Unlike FIND, SEARCH is case-insensitive and supports wildcard characters (* and ?).
Examples:
=SEARCH("market", "supermarket")
returns 6.
=SEARCH("e", "Excel")
returns 1 (case-insensitive).
SEARCH also returns #VALUE! under the same error conditions as FIND.
FIND vs. SEARCH
- Case sensitivity: FIND is case-sensitive; SEARCH is not.
- Wildcards: SEARCH supports wildcards (* and ?); FIND does not.
Practical Formula Examples
FIND and SEARCH are rarely used alone; they're often combined with other functions (MID, LEFT, RIGHT).
Example 1: Extracting Strings Before/After a Character
Given a column of names (column A), extract first and last names into separate columns.
-
First Name:
=LEFT(A2, FIND(" ", A2)-1)
or=LEFT(A2, SEARCH(" ", A2)-1)
-
Last Name:
=RIGHT(A2,LEN(A2)-FIND(" ",A2))
or=RIGHT(A2,LEN(A2)-SEARCH(" ",A2))
Example 2: Finding the Nth Occurrence of a Character
Find the position of the 2nd dash in a string (column A):
=FIND("-", A2, FIND("-",A2) 1)
For the 3rd occurrence:
=FIND("-",A2, FIND("-", A2, FIND("-",A2) 1) 2)
A simpler alternative using SUBSTITUTE and CHAR:
=FIND(CHAR(1),SUBSTITUTE(A2,"-",CHAR(1),3))
Example 3: Extracting N Characters After a Character
Extract the first 3 characters after the first dash:
=MID(A2, FIND("-",A2) 1, 3)
or =MID(A2, SEARCH("-",A2) 1, 3)
To handle variable lengths after the dash:
=MID(A2, FIND("-",A2) 1, FIND("-", A2, FIND("-",A2) 1) - FIND("-",A2)-1)
Example 4: Extracting Text Within Parentheses
Extract text enclosed in parentheses (column A):
=MID(A2,SEARCH("(",A2) 1, SEARCH(")",A2)-SEARCH("(",A2)-1)
This tutorial provides a comprehensive guide to using FIND and SEARCH functions in Excel for advanced text manipulation. The next tutorial will cover the REPLACE function.
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FIND and SEARCH formula examples
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