Programmers, like computers (and vice-versa) are extremely literal.
 
We can programatically compare each row of both sheets
and test for exact matches of all cells in the row.
THAT's fairly straight-forward.
 
(I'd concatenate all cells in each row of the first sheet and add it to a 
Dictionary object, then loop through all rows in the second sheet, concatenate 
the contents and check for an entry in the Dictionary.)
 
checking for a SIMILARITIES is much more difficult.
To a computer, the NUMBER 1 and the CHARACTER "1" (chr(49))
are actually two different things!
 
In your case, what constitutes "similar"? 
If reading left-to-right, if the two concatenated strings match the first X 
characters, then is it "similar"?

Paul
-----------------------------------------
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By all the means you can,
In all the ways you can,
In all the places you can,
At all the times you can,
To all the people you can,
As long as ever you can.” - John Wesley
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>________________________________
> From: Salvation <amphi...@gmail.com>
>To: excel-macros@googlegroups.com 
>Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 1:38 PM
>Subject: $$Excel-Macros$$ Matching data
>  
>
>
>I have two  excel workbook with identical columns i need to compare the two 
>workbooks to find records that match exactly and those that are likely to be 
>similar for further checking. I need help on how to go about it  
>
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Are you =EXP(E:RT) or =NOT(EXP(E:RT)) in Excel? And do you wanna be? It’s 
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