I have a dropdown menu with "-,I,Z" and I want 3 seperate choices for this options, I have tried the below formula, but doesnt seam to work
=IF(G17="I","Text 1",IF(AND(G17="Z",G17="-"),"Text 2","Text 3"))
Please help, I couldn't fins a similar scenario in here.
This doesn't work because of the AND function says G17 has to be BOTH Z and - simultaneously, which is impossible. If you change it to an OR function it should work
I would recommend the IFS function to make it more readable:
=IFS(G17="I","Text 1",OR(G17="Z",G17="-"),"Text 2", TRUE(), "Text 3"))
Related
This might be a simple fix I'm unsure. I have the following formula which I would like to be able to drag up and down =IF(C311>B311,IF(C310>B310,IF(B309>C309,IF(C312>B312,2,1),0),0),0)
I'm guessing AND can be implemented in some way but I'm not sure. The logic behind my goal is if C311>B311 AND C310>B310 AND B309>C309 then check to see if C312>B312 if it is then put a 2 else put a 1. Perhaps there is another solution as well I'm not thinking of.
Try this: =IF(AND(C311>B311,C310>B310,B309>C309),IF(C312>B312,2,1),"")
Last argument I left it as "" but replace it to whatever you need.
Just another approach-
=IF((C311>B311)*(C310>B310)*(B309>C309),IF(C312>B312,2,1),"")
In Excel, I have three formulas/statements I'd like to merge into one. I've listed the statements below. Is there a way to merge all three formulas into one? I'd like to learn how to write the logic to do this. Thanks.
=IF(COUNTIF($B:$B,$A2)=1, "MATCH")
=IF(COUNTIF($B:$B,$A2)>1, "DUPLICATE")
=IF(COUNTIF($B:$B,$A2)<1, "NO MATCH")
The syntax of the IF function is IF(true-false-condition, value-if-condition-true, value-if-condition-false) (where either missing value-if defaults to 0).
3-way (or more) IF conditionals can be written by nesting multiple boolean IF's, for example:
=IF(COUNTIF($B:$B,$A2)>1, "DUPLICATE", IF(COUNTIF($B:$B,$A2)=1, "MATCH", "NO MATCH"))
Also consider good practice of trapping the default 'else' case. The above answer does not do this, and it assumes your input will always be one of your stated cases (=1, <1 or >1) so omits the final IF condition. In that example this will not error because the evaluations will always return true or false, but this may not behave as expected if an input is a different data type, null set, etc. In the stated answer, this unexpected behaviour will "fail silently" which is a potential issue.
Instead, try:
=IF(COUNTIF($B:$B,$A2)>1, "DUPLICATE", IF(COUNTIF($B:$B,$A2)=1, "MATCH", IF(COUNTIF($B:$B,$A2)<1, "NO MATCH", "ERROR")))
In implementation you would replace "ERROR" with your chosen error handling method.
You could also look at the following Excel functions, as an alternative to nesting multiple IF functions:
SWITCH:
=SWITCH(expression, value1, result1, [default or value2, result2],…[default or value3, result3])
IFS:
=IFS (test1, value1, [test2, value2], ...)
Some of these are newer than others so be sure to test to your version of Excel (and consider compatibility with any other possible users of your file).
Here is my statement with just one IF Statement:
=IF(AF2="Consultant",IF(C2=INDEX(JIRA!F:F,MATCH('RFO Checks'!M2,JIRA!A:A,0)),1,0),"N/A")
This works great, but now I need to add two more IF Statements.
AF2 will either contain "Consultant", "Retailer", or "PC".
Each one will be directed to a different price column:
for "Consultant" it's JIRA!F:F
for "Retailer" it's JIRA!D:D
for "PC", it's JIRA!E:E.
I've been wracking my brain for two days now and haven't gotten no where.
Suggestions?
Thank you in advance!
Use CHOOSE()
=IFERROR(--(C2=INDEX(CHOOSE(MATCH(AF2,{"Consultant", "Retailer", "PC"},0),JIRA!F:F,JIRA!D:D,JIRA!E:E),MATCH('RFO Checks'!M2,JIRA!A:A,0))),"N/A")
Aaron,
I have provided you the high level structure for the change of logic.
If this is what you want, then you can substitute the phrases with the appropriate logic.
=IF(AF2="Consultant",
IF(C2=INDEX(JIRA!F:F,MATCH('RFO Checks'!M2,JIRA!A:A,0)),1,0),
IF(AF2="Retailer",
<insert_logic_for_retailer>,
IF(AF2="PC",<insert_logic_for_PC>,"N/A")
)
)
Logic for Consultant -
IF(C2=INDEX(JIRA!F:F,MATCH('RFO Checks'!M2,JIRA!A:A,0)),1,0)
Logic for Retailer, use this to replace -
IF(C2=INDEX(JIRA!D:D,MATCH('RFO Checks'!M2,JIRA!A:A,0)),1,0)
Logic for PC, use this to replace -
IF(C2=INDEX(JIRA!E:E,MATCH('RFO Checks'!M2,JIRA!A:A,0)),1,0)
Let me know in case you still have any issues!
I'm trying to create an IF statement that will basically look at one cell which currently has a macros enabling multi-select drop down from a lookup list.
The field the IF statement is based on is a drop down containing the following information:
Android
iOS
PC/Mac
All Devices
Mobile Devices
The user can select one value or multiple values.
The IF statement will be true IF, the field contains All Devices OR Mobile Devices OR Android AND iOS together. It must also be able to check wildcard as you can select multiple items therefore could be Android, PC/Mac, iOS in which case it should be true because both Android and iOS has been selected.
What should be the actual statement as this is the current one I'm using but I know you can't have wildcard string within this statement:
=IF(OR(C7="*-iOS*",C7="*-Android*",C7="Mobile Device",C7="All Delivery Methods",AND(C7="*-iOS*",C7="*-Android*")),"Mobile DTC/ALL","STB (VRP) HD, DEVICE (UVP) HD")
Thanks
Edit: If any of the following Scenarios is met and exist in Cell C7, then return the True statement.
Scenario 1: All Delivery Methods
Scenario 2: Mobile Devices
Scenario 3: Android AND iOS
Otherwise return the False statement.
Excel does not support wildcard statements on all formulas (see supported formulas), but you can achieve similar result, if you build a bit your formula.
Solution 1
E.g., try using FIND() with IFERROR(). FIND() will give you a number, telling you where the searched string is located.
Thus, =FIND("-Android","tell me more about -Android"), will give you a number.
If it does not find anything, it will give you a value error, which you may catch with IFERROR and return a specific value e.g. -1.
Then build the OR checking for values bigger than -1 and you will have what you need.
Solution 2
Another option is to use SEARCH(), which supoports wildcards the way you expect it:
=SEARCH("test*1";"aaaaaaaatestaaaa1")
will return 9. SEARCH in MSDN
Solution 3
In general, there are many ways to build this. As suggested in the comments by # ImaginaryHuman072889, you may use ISNUMBER(). It has the advantage, that it works quite ok with errors, thus you do not need an error catcher for it. Something like this will work ok:
=OR(ISNUMBER(SEARCH("a","b")),ISNUMBER(SEARCH("b","b")))
However, if you change the method from the first solution with an option returning 0 in case of error you would have something like this working as well:
=OR(IFERROR(SEARCH("a","b"),0),IFERROR(SEARCH("b","c"),0))
which is quite the same amount of formulas.
Solution 4
A really interesting solution, avoiding both OR() and IFERROR(), proposed by #barry houdini. It simply returns 0, if nothing from the results is found:
=COUNT(SEARCH({"a*a";"b*b";"c*c"},"I used to be abba fan."))
will return 2, because of a*a and b*b being found in abba. This is how to include the AND() of the original question of the OP:
=AND(
COUNT(SEARCH({"a*a";"b*b";"c*c"},"I used to be abba fan.")),
COUNT(SEARCH({"party*so";"am not"},"but now I am not."))
)
Is it possible to use an IF statement for multiple criteria? or what would I be best using... I have tried to amend the question with what I'm looking to do the code isnt correct in this but it may highlight more what Im looking to achieve.
If(A3="Dog","Dog Green","Dog Blue"),Matches,doesn’t match)
For some reason it wont let me upload a picture....
Any help/advice would be greatly appreciated
This will definitely work:
=IF(OR(A3="Dog",A3="Dog Green",A3="Dog Blue"),"Matches","doesn’t match")
just ad OR statement inside IF Statement
Don't forget to use Quotation marks also
There are many ways to test for multiple criteria in Excel. Probably the easiest would be either to:
Use the AND / OR BOOLEAN operaters. AND(test1,test2...) checks to see whether each of test1 & test2 are TRUE (can hold as many arguments as you need). ie:
=if(And(A1="dog",B1="cat"),"there is a cat and a dog", "there is not both a cat and a dog")
OR(test1,test2) checks to see whether either test1 is TRUE, or test2 is TRUE, or if both are true. ie:
=if(Or(A1="dog",B1="cat"),"There is either a cat, or there is a dog, or both","there is neither a cat nor a dog")
Another broad option is to 'nest' one IF statement inside of another. ie:
=if(A1="dog","There is a dog. Have not checked for cats",if(B1="cat","A1 is not a dog, and also B1 is a cat","There is neither a cat nor a dog"))
If you have more specific questions you should update your question with all possible details you have.
It's a simple formula you could have found on google:
=ISNUMBER(FIND("dog",A1))
Will return True if dog is in A1 and false if it is not.
For further reading (well explained) https://exceljet.net/formula/cell-contains-specific-text
Also, it seems to me like this is a single-criteria. What do you mean by multiple criteria?