This article describes the formula syntax and usage of the SUBSTITUTE function in Microsoft Excel.
Description
Substitutes new_text for old_text in a text string. Use SUBSTITUTE when you want to replace specific text in a text string; use REPLACE when you want to replace any text that occurs in a specific location in a text string.
Syntax
SUBSTITUTE(text, old_text, new_text, [instance_num])
The SUBSTITUTE function syntax has the following arguments:
-
Text Required. The text or the reference to a cell containing text for which you want to substitute characters.
-
Old_text Required. The text you want to replace.
-
New_text Required. The text you want to replace old_text with.
-
Instance_num Optional. Specifies which occurrence of old_text you want to replace with new_text. If you specify instance_num, only that instance of old_text is replaced. Otherwise, every occurrence of old_text in text is changed to new_text.
Example
Copy the example data in the following table, and paste it in cell A1 of a new Excel worksheet. For formulas to show results, select them, press F2, and then press Enter. If you need to, you can adjust the column widths to see all the data.
Data |
||
---|---|---|
Sales Data |
< |
|
Quarter 1, 2008 |
< |
|
Quarter 1, 2011 |
< |
|
Formula |
Description (Result) |
Result |
=SUBSTITUTE(A2, "Sales", "Cost") |
Substitutes Cost for Sales (Cost Data) |
Cost Data |
=SUBSTITUTE(A3, "1", "2", 1) |
Substitutes first instance of "1" with "2" (Quarter 2, 2008) |
Quarter 2, 2008 |
=SUBSTITUTE(A4, "1", "2", 3) |
Substitutes third instance of "1" with "2" (Quarter 1, 2012) |
Quarter 1, 2012 |