The aim of my workbook is to show result from a spreadsheet, after applying filters.
In this example,
I get my spreadsheet in range A1:C13,
in column E, thanks to the Yellow formula,
It shows every Done date by unsorted.
The problem is that I want to show relative Name in column F. But there is some equals dates for different names,
My reflex where to do an Index Match, but it can't show when there is several results from the same conditions.
Any ideas ?
Change your formula to include the Name column in the output:
=SORT(FILTER(Table2[[Date]:[Name]],Table2[Statut]=E1),1,-1)
If your data is not right next to each other and you do not want the middle columns to show in your output then we use the same formula wrapped in INDEX to return the correct column of the array:
=INDEX(SORT(FILTER(Table2[[Date]:[Name]],Table2[Statut]=F1),1,-1),0,1)
And
=INDEX(SORT(FILTER(Table2[[Date]:[Name]],Table2[Statut]=F1),1,-1),0,3)
Where the ending ,1 in the first formula refers to the relative column in the referred to range of the date, and the ,3 in the second refers to the relative column in the referred to range of the Name
Related
I have 2 Excel spreadsheets and both sheets have a "Code" field and value that may or may not exist in both. In sheet1 and sheet2 there is also an "ID", i'm hoping that if the "ID" is populated in sheet1 and if the matching code exists in sheet2, a query can transfer the "ID" to sheet 2
SHEET1
|
SHEET2
I can find the matching values using vlookup but my issue is getting the ID field to populate
=VLOOKUP(A1,Sheet1!A:A,1,FALSE)
Instead: =VLOOKUP(A1,Sheet1!A:B,2,FALSE).
From Microsoft's help on Vlookup:
How to get started
There are four pieces of information that you will need in order to build the VLOOKUP syntax:
The value you want to look up, also called the lookup value.
The range where the lookup value is located. Remember that the
lookup value should always be in the first column in the range for
VLOOKUP to work correctly. For example, if your lookup value is in
cell C2 then your range should start with C.
The column number in the range that contains the return value. For
example, if you specify B2:D11 as the range, you should count B as
the first column, C as the second, and so on.
Optionally, you can specify TRUE if you want an approximate match or
FALSE if you want an exact match of the return value. If you don't
specify anything, the default value will always be TRUE or
approximate match.
Pay special attention to parameters 2 and 3.
Note that number 2 "The range where the lookup value is located" should be the full range where the first column of the range has the values to lookup and the last column of the range should contain the values you want to return. So your A:A only having one column, will only lookup and return values in column A. You want values returned from column B so it must be included as well, to become A:B.
Since column B is the second column in the lookup range of A:B then your third parameter will be 2 which leads to the vlookup at the top of this answer.
This is what you are doing:
VLOOKUP(A1,Sheet1!A:A,1,FALSE)
(I will only talk about Sheet1!A:A and 1)
You are looking into column A and from there you are taking column number 1 (which is column A).
What you should be doing, this this:
VLOOKUP(A1,Sheet1!A:B,2,FALSE)
Look into table, made up of columns A and (up to) B, you will automatically look into the first column, and you return the value you find in column number 2 (which is column B).
I have the above formatted table.
I want to merge all last values in every row under a single column "Last Cell".
Could somebody please help.
Thanks in advance.
Please try this formula in your table's last column.
=IF(MOD(COUNTA(Table1[#[IN]:[OUT4]]),2),"",INDEX(Table1[#[IN]:[OUT4]],1,COUNTA(Table1[#[IN]:[OUT4]])))
The term Table1[#[IN]:[OUT4]] appears 3 times. It specifies the range from the IN column to OUT4 column in Table1. Change the table name to match the name of your table. You can also specify a sheet range, like A2:H2.
The formula returns nothing (blank) if the last used column is an IN column and the value in that column if it's an OUT column. The column is identified by the MOD() function. MOD(COUNTA(Table1[#[IN]:[OUT4]]),2) will either return 1 or 0. IF(MOD(COUNTA(Table1[#[IN]:[OUT4]]),2),"", will return a blank if the result is 1. If you have columns to the left of what you showed us, and need to include them in the range examined by the formula, you may have to change this part of the formula into IF(MOD(COUNTA(Table1[#[IN]:[OUT4]]),2)=0,"", to omit results if the last column is an IN column.
What you are looking to do is CONCATENATE which means to merge the data together.
You can use
=CONCATENATE(cell1, " ", cell2)
-- OR --
The less 'codey' way of doing this is to merge the data without using the =CONCATENATE() formula: =A1&" "&A2&" "&A3&" "... etc
Need Help on Named Ranges in Formulas:
I have a second workbook ('TEST.xlsx') as the destination, referencing worksheet-scoped named ranges (in 12 columns X 75 rows) in the source workbook ('FLOW.xlsx'). I want to create a formula that will match a look-up value (a date entered into cell C3 in TEST that will return the matching named range IF there are 2 or more blank cells in that matched named range/column and the remaining named ranges/columns in that set of 12 columns with 2+ blank cells. The 12 separate columns in the source workbook ('FLOW') are named by month, year and location (ex., "jan_2019_class.1","feb_2019_class.1", etc.), the worksheet columns being C, H, M, R, W, AB, AG, AL, AQ, AV, BA, and BF. The rows are 80-155. I've only been able to make a simple working COUNTBLANK formula in my TEST workbook, ex.:
=COUNTBLANK('[FLOW.xlsx]Class_1-Chart'!jan_2019_class.1)
But NOT for successive columns (with different named ranges and the columns are non-sequential); and I can't figure out the functioning formula to combine with this to get the count AND data returned by criteria as described above. Please, no VBA/macros.
Thank you in advance for the help!
'TEST.xlsx' Screen Shot-RVSD
FLOW.xlsx- sample screenshot
There are many approaches but I personally prefer the use of helper rows/columns/cells and named ranges.
In my demonstration I used two class attendant schedule in two different year from January to June as shown below (they are sitting in Column C to M in my example):
As shown above, I have added two helper rows on top of each schedule. The first helper row is used to find out if there is 2 or more vacancies in each month, if so returns TRUE. I have given the name check.2019.class.1 and check.2021.class.5 for each of them.
The second helper row is simply showing the range name of each month such as jan_2019_class.1, feb_2019_class.2 etc. I have given the name NameRng.2019.class.1 and NameRng.2021.class.5 for each of them.
On the TEST sheet I have the following set up:
where the look up value in cell C3 is actually returned by a formula so it can be "dynamically" changed by the user. Please note in the following formula I used a name ClassNo which is essentially the value from cell B3.
=B2&"_"&B1&"_class."&ClassNo
I have also named cell C3 as Start_MthYrClass which will be used in my following formula.
The formula for looking up the first available month in 2019 if the start month is jan_2019_class.1 is:
=INDEX(NameRng.2019.class.1,MATCH(1,(TRANSPOSE(ROW($1:$11))>=MATCH(Start_MthYrClass,NameRng.2019.class.1,0))*Check.2019.class.1,0))
Please note it is an array formula so you MUST press Ctrl+Shift+Enter upon finishing the formula in the formula bar otherwise they will not function correctly.
The logic is to first "filter" the range NameRng.2019.class.1 using this formula =TRANSPOSE(ROW($1:$11))>=MATCH(Start_MthYrClass,NameRng.2019.class.1,0), in which ROW($1:$11) represents {1;2;3;4;5;6;7;8;9;10;11} and TRANSPOSE will turn it into {1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11}. This range of numbers represents the column index in that specific range which is Column C to M (in your case it would be ROW($1:$56) as your data is in Column C to BF). Then I use MATCH to return the start column index of the look up month jan_2019_class.1, and it should return 1 as this month starts in the 1st place/column in the range NameRng.2019.class.1. So this is what I am actually comparing: {1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11}>=1, and it will return {TRUE,TRUE,TRUE,TRUE,TRUE,TRUE,TRUE,TRUE,TRUE,TRUE,TRUE}.
Then I multiply the above result with range Check.2019.class.1 which is essentially {FALSE,0,FALSE,0,TRUE,0,FALSE,0,TRUE,0,TRUE}. Then I will get {0,0,0,0,1,0,0,0,1,0,1}. FYI in Excel TRUE=1 and FALSE=0, so TRUE x FALSE = 0 while TRUE x TRUE = 1.
Lastly, I use MATCH to find out the position of the first 1 in the above result which is the 5th place/column, and then use INDEX to return the corresponding value from range NameRng.2019.class.1 which is mar_2019_class.1.
Here is a more universal formula which allows you enter it in the first cell C6 and drag it down to apply across board, if you have given names to the relevant cells and ranges in the same way as what I have demonstrated.
=IFERROR(INDEX(INDIRECT("NameRng."&B6&".class."&ClassNo),MATCH(1,(TRANSPOSE(ROW($1:$11))>=MATCH(Start_MthYrClass,INDIRECT("NameRng."&B6&".class."&ClassNo),0))*INDIRECT("Check."&B6&".class."&ClassNo),0)),"")
It is also an array formula so you MUST press Ctrl+Shift+Enter upon finishing the formula in the formula bar.
It is essentially the same formula as the first one but I have added IFERROR to return a blank cell if there is no match, and I used INDIRECT to refer to the named ranges dynamically based on the year and class number chosen.
Now, if I change the look up criteria to mar_2021_class.5, here is an updated result:
Let me know if you have any questions. Cheers :)
I am using the following formula:
=VLOOKUP(E9, 'Raw data'!$A$1:$I$45857, 9, FALSE)
I have two tabs and I want one column in my first sheet to lookup the # value found in 'raw data' associated with the ID number found in column E (data begins on cell E9). my second tab, 'raw data', includes that same field as found starting on E9 in sheet 1 within the data range A1:I45857. The column I want returned from 'raw data' is the 9th column. I want to be exact matches only.
What I think excel is thinking - look for e9 in the array 'raw data' and when I see it, return the value that I find in the 9th column of that row within array 'raw data'.
What excel is saying - A value is not available to the formula or function
I am confused because the value is in fact available within that array. when I filter and search for just one of the IDs, I find it in both sheets. The data type is number for both columns and there are no rogue spaces or anything...
My goal is ultimately to take a subset of ids and look at the difference between the # found on sheet1 and the number found on 'raw data'. I am Vlookup-ing so that i can grab the # value on 'raw data, set it right next to the # i am comparing it to on sheet1 and then I can pivot the data to aggregate both of those numbers based on ID and create a calculated field showing the % difference between the two.
Any input on how to fix my vlookup or a workaround to join my # from 'raw data' to sheet1 based on a common ID is MUCH appreciated.
I recommend that you look into the combination of INDEX & MATCH, rather than VLOOKUP, for situations like this. VLOOKUP has 2 main flaws: (1) you have to order your data so that your search term is the left-most column of a continuous data block [as you have just seen]; and (2) it is volatile, meaning that when a column is inserted within your data block, it will no longer properly 'count' the number of columns to move to retrieve your data.
MATCH is like half of VLOOKUP. You give MATCH a specific column or row, and a value to search for, and it will simply return the number of cells in it had to move to find that value.
=MATCH(A1,B:B,0)
This says 'look at B:B, and tell me what row the value of A1 appears on'.
INDEX is like the other half of VLOOKUP. You give INDEX a group of cells (either a row, column, or a 2D range), and a specific row number (plus potentially a column number), and it will return the value for that cell.
=INDEX(C:C,5)
This gives you the value of cell C5, which is the 5th row found in the column given to INDEX. Combine these two formulas and it will return the value of column C, where column B matches A1:
=INDEX(C:C,MATCH(A1,B:B,0))
This formula gives an identical result to
=VLOOKUP(A1,B:C,0)
VLOOKUP looks simpler here, but INDEX & MATCH is much more versatile - in your case, you wouldn't have needed to reorder your data to get it to work, you could have used the formula:
=INDEX('Raw Data'!I:I,MATCH(E9,'Raw Data'!E:E,0))
Once you get into the habit of using INDEX / MATCH over vlookup, you will find that your data is a lot more flexible to manage.
Got it to work by making my ID field in 'raw data' the leftmost column.
You don't need to start the Vlookup in column A. If the ID column is not in column A, Vlookup can still work, as long as the ID column is to the left of the column you want to return. So, if you want to return the value from column I, and the ID column is in column F, you can leave the table as it is and change the Vlookup to
=VLOOKUP(E9, 'Raw data'!$F$1:$I$45857, 4, FALSE)
This will look for the match in column F and returns the value from the fourth column, which is column I.
I have a table with student IDs separated in groups. I need a handy way to count the total number of students in each group and populate it after the last row of each group (marked with ??)
Currently I just enter =COUNT() and then manually figure out the top and bottom borders of the range for each group. Not convenient at all.
I was thinking that a possible solution could be one of the following:
A some kind of pivot table permutation. I failed on this one.
Excel Data->Outline->Subtotals functions. Again, fail. It keeps creating new rows in my table.
A universal formula that can be pasted into each ?? cell. Not the most graceful solution, but still would do.
A macro. As a last remedy if nothing else works.
The following steps will calculate the subtotals while preserving the structuring and formatting of your worksheet.
Put this formula in cell C1 and copy the formula down the column:
=IF(NOT(ISERROR(SEARCH("Total",A1))),COUNTA(INDIRECT("B"&MATCH(LEFT(A1,LEN(A1)-7),A:A,0)+1&".B"&(MATCH(A1,A:A,0)+1))),IF(B1="","",B1))
Apply a conditional format to cell C1 with the formula rule =(MOD(ROW(C1),2)=0) and blue fill to match the shading on the other rows. Copy the format down the column using Paste Special Format.
Either hide column B, or copy the values in column C to column B using Paste Special Values and hide Column C. If you decide to copy the values to column B, you won't need to set the conditional formats.
Here is what the formula does:
First, check whether the formula's row is a Total row, by searching the cell in column A of the row for the word "Total," using the SEARCH function.
If the word "Total" is found:
Determine the range in the worksheet of the student IDs for the group for that total row:
a) Identify the rows in which the words "GroupX" and "GroupX Total" are found by using the MATCH function. With that, you know that the IDs for the group are in a range that starts at, say, row x and ends at row y.
b) With the starting and ending row numbers, construct the address range in which the IDs lie, which has to be the string "B" + (row x) + "." + "B" + (row y).
c) Turn the string into a range reference that can actually used in a formula using the INDIRECT function.
Count the number of students in the group using the COUNTA function and the range, and show that as the formula's result.
If the word "Total" is not found
Check whether the cell in column B is empty
a) If it is empty, show a blank as the formula's result
b) if it is not empty, it must be a student ID, so show the ID as the formula's result.
Add a column (I usually add it to the LEFT of the existing matrix) where you enter a formula from row 2 onwards that fills the blanks in the old column A. Then the old matrix including your new column can be used in a pivot.
So Insert a column left of your matrix, this is column A now. Put a header in Cell A1, for example "Group Name1"
Enter the following formula in cell B2 and extend it to the end:
=IF(B2="",A1,B2) This way your blanks will be filled.
Now apply a pivot on this matrix and there you are.
Maybe not the nicest looking solution, but its quick and works well.
If u have table like this
Students id Name of students group ........
then u can use countif/countifs formula