Note: you can also use Flash Fill in Excel 2013 and above, and the “Text to columns” feature in earlier versions of Excel. Both approaches are  simpler than the formulas described below. However, for a formula-based solution, read on. 50 ft x 200 ft 153 ft x 324 ft Etc. In a spreadsheet, it’s a lot more convenient to have actual numbers so that you can use them in calculations as you wish. Extracting individual dimensions from a text representation can be done with formulas that combine several text functions.

Solution

In this case, it because we have both the “ft” unit and space characters (" “) included in the dimensions, it makes sense to remove these first. That will “normalize” the dimensions and simplify the formulas that do the actual extraction. To remove both “ft” and " “, we are using this formula in cell C6, which contains two nested SUBSTITUTE functions:

This formula takes the original text, and first strips “ft” (in the inner ), then strips spaces with the outer SUBSTITUTE function. The result is a dimension with just the “x” separating the two parts. Now we can two relatively straightforward formulas to extract each part. To get the dimension on the left, D6 contains:

To get the dimension on the right, E6 contains:

Both of the formulas above extract the correct dimension by using FIND to locate the “x”. For more detail, see the related function links on this page.

Dave Bruns

Hi - I’m Dave Bruns, and I run Exceljet with my wife, Lisa. Our goal is to help you work faster in Excel. We create short videos, and clear examples of formulas, functions, pivot tables, conditional formatting, and charts.