I'm fairly new to excel but have been learning lots. Please go easy on me.
Have 30,000 pieces of data, and constantly filtering this data set. As such, all my formulas constantly need to be updated to the new range (for example, a filter may change my range from B7000:B9000 from B1:B30000). I was able to make it so I can retrieve the row numbers for the first and last visible column.
I was hoping to be able to reference this within my cells to expand my range. What I tried (just as an example),
=INDEX(Helper!D3:Helper!E3),MATCH... (rest of the formula is correct)
In the Helper Spreadsheets for D3 I have
=Concatenate("'Sheet 1'!U"&D2)
Where, D2 is the formula I have used to grab my first visible row. In this case my D2 displays 7000
Is this doable or am I totally approaching this wrong? I've seemed to hit a brick wall and I can't figure out how to get this to work. Thanks again.
EDIT:
I am trying to use index and match on a range of cells to populate a fairly large table. Problem is range keeps changing every time I filter data. So I have 30 iterations of this data I need to get through in an already fairly complex algorithm i'm running. I was hoping to save a few steps by having my formulas auto expand depending on the filter, which would save me lots of headache as right now I have to go through and edit each formula by hand to the range the filter sets.
I thought I had it figured out by getting a way to grab the 1st and last visible column, however now I can't enter those into a reference as a formula for example as in the case above.
Related
I use the auto-fill handle very often; both dragging and double-clicking. I need it, so I don't want to disable it in the options. However, I have certain situations where I'm just trying to copy down values to the next cells, and it appears Excel is using some type of memory/cache to auto-fill them with crazy values. I recognize the values; but there is no rhyme or reason as to why it's auto-filling them at this moment in time.
Example: There are no formulas in any of these cells and this is just a brand new sheet in Excel. I want to grab handle of cell B10 and copy it down to B14:
Now, I wish I could record a little clip of me copying this down so you can see it change the values live, but I promise you, this is what the values get changed to, and it has no relation to the values above it in the same column or anywhere in this sheet and there are zero formulas anywhere; just a simple table being populated:
What can I do to get this to copy the correct values? This has created errors in other tables where I didn't catch it populating the cells incorrectly in time.
My colleague has been suffering this exact problem and his solution is detailed below:
Go into Advanced Options and under General click on Edit Custom Lists button and you should find your values listed there. If so, you can delete them from this list and the problem should go away
Good luck!
I'm practising MS Excel skills. I have a workbook in which I want to analyses data from different tables.
Each worksheet contains a table with the information from the year. So in worksheet "2017" I have a table named "Table2017". I have this for each year (starting 2015).
After a some research, I finally found a way to count how many times something in a certain place happened.
=SUM(COUNTIFS(Table2018[Place];B3;Table2018[Activity];{"Paid";"Awarded"}))
+SUM(COUNTIFS(Table2017[Place];B3;Table2017[Activity];{"Paid";"Awarded"}))
+SUM(COUNTIFS(Table2016[Place];B3;Table2016[Activity];{"Paid";"Awarded"}))
+SUM(COUNTIFS(Table2015[Place];B3;Table2015[Activity];{"Paid";"Awarded"}))
This works perfectly. It will calculate how many times per place a paid service or an awarded (gifted/sponsored) service was delivered. In the B column, I have a list of places (hence the B3 reference), so after completing the formula, I can select the cell and enlarge/drag to copy it to the rest of the column and apply for every place.
However, the formula is really long and every year upon creating a new worksheet, I need to add a new part to the formula.
Is there a way to compact this? And ideally have the formula search for every table that has the relevant information (like: "Table20??" or "Table 20*"), go in and count the times my conditions are found?
I hope my question is clear enough.
Thanks in advance!
P.S. I have zero experience in VBA/VBS, so I'm hoping to realize this in a normal formula.
There are ways to make it more compact, but they will necessarily make the function more complicated, so it wont be any easy win. See for yourself:
you basically need to be able to cycle through the years inside formula without creating custom formulas. One way to do this is to use ROW inside INDIRECT function. This way you can replace multiple
Table2015[Place]
with one array function containing
INDIRECT("Table"&ROW($A$2015:$A$2018)&"[Place]")
as it is an array function it will essentially cycle through the cells in the ROW function creating Table2015[Place], Table2016[Place], Table2017[Place] and Table2018[Place]. Your whole formula would look something like this
=SUM(COUNTIFS(INDIRECT("Table"&ROW($A$2015:$A$2018)&"[Place]");B3;INDIRECT("Table"&ROW($A$2015:$A$2018)&"[Activity]");{"Paid";"Awarded"}))
and it must be entered using ctrl+shift+enter (you will see {} brackets around the function). This should work to make the function smaller and you will need only to change the cell reference each year instead of adding another sum, but the question is if the separate sums are not easier to read and maintain.
I've been struggling with this longer than I care to admit, but I have a fairly simple OFFSET function call which works on one sheet, but if I copy it to a different sheet it gives a #VALUE error.
On a sheet named "Deliverable" I have this formula in a cell:
=OFFSET(Deliverable!$B$72,1,0,,3)
and it works fine.
If I go to any other sheet and use the same exact formula, or use it in the Name Manager, it gives a #VALUE error.
If I leave off the final parameter indicated the number of columns I want, it does work:
=OFFSET(Deliverable!$B$72,1,0)
but of course isn't giving me the range I need.
Any idea what's going on with this?
I'm using Excel 2016 on Windows 7.
-- Updated Info --
In a nutshell, my spreadsheet has two cells which I'm using as dropdown lists, where the 2nd cell's list feeds off the selection in the first. The data they are based on has this format:
OptionA A B C D
OptionB A B
OptionC D E F
So the first dropdown uses a simple Data Validation source pointing to the column with OptionA, OptionB, etc. Once that's chosen, the second dropdown list should contain the appropriate options for the one selected. So if OptionB is selected, then the 2nd dropdown list should show A and B.
When I initially wrote this, the data validation source was just a simple VLOOKUP entry, but the lists often had blanks since the number of options varies for each entry. Wanting to fix it up a bit, I ended up with this formula:
=OFFSET(Deliverable!B72,Deliverable!B87,0,1,COUNTA(OFFSET(Deliverable!B72,Deliverable!B87,0,1,5)))
There won't be any more than 5 options, and there are no empty cells in the middle of the data to filter out.
In one spreadsheet I have I used this as a named range definition, then specified the named range for the cells data validation source and it worked. In this other spreadsheet however, it gave me the error described earlier.
However, it looks like when I enter the statement directly into the data validation source field and not in the name manager, it works as expected.
Am I taking the totally wrong approach?
What is it that you want this formula to do? As written, it is returning a block of three horizontal cells. The #VALUE error is Excel's way of telling you "Hey, you're trying to return three cells, but I can't fit them all in the one cell that you are calling this formula from".
The reason you see a result in some places and not others is because of something called Implicit Intersection. Give it a spin on Google. But basically, it just returns whichever one of those three results corresponds to the column that the formula is entered into. If you copy that exact same formula to say row F you will see that it returns a #VALUE error there, because it doesn't know what cell it should return given the column you're calling it from doesn't match any of the cells it is returning. The fact that you don't know this indicates that the formula you're using doesn't in fact do what you think it does.
--UPDATE --
Okay, following your further clarificaiton it seems that you're talking about Cascading Dropdowns aka Dynamic Dropdowns. Lots of info on Google about how to set these up, but you may be interested in an approach I blogged about sometime back that not only provides this functionality, but also ensures that someone can't later on go and change the 'upstream' dropdown without first clearing the 'downstream' one should they want to make a change.
Note that those links talk about a slightly complicated method compared to others, but the method has it's advantages in that it also handles more levels than two, and your DV lists are easily maintained as they live in an Excel Table.
This sounds like an array equation. Try hitting Ctrl+Shift+Enter in the other sheets to validate it as an array equation.
Whenever you need to reference ranges instead of single cells, Excel needs to know that you are working with arrays.
I am making a payroll program in Excel and one of my concerns is that the salaries of the employees are searched using the INDEX and MATCH or VLOOKUP function. The problem is if the salaries get updated in the future (e.g. a raise or changes in rates), all the previous entries that used the old salaries will be updated to the new salaries. This is a disaster and would make my entire program useless and inefficient. Therefore I need to automatically lock previous calculated cells after a certain time.
Edit: Note we do not want to do this manually such as copy pasting values only because almost all cells are connected to each other and one mistake by the encoder or if they forget to do this before updating a value, everything will be messed up.
No! Not copying and pasting, there's a simpler way. You want to convert the Formula property of a given cell (what's shown in the formula bar in Excel) into the Value property of the cell (what's shown in the cell on the spreadsheet). For a given range A1:B6 this would done by the statement
Range("A1:B6").formula = Range("A1:B6").value
But there's a quirk in Excel that you can run faster by accessing a Value2 property, so
Range("A1:B6").formula = Range("A1:B6").value2
The rest of the code is left as an exercise for the reader :-)
Afternoon all :)
This is kind of a little difficult to explain but ill happily clarify where ever it is needed. Thank you for taking the time to read this post ^^ Here goes..
I am currently creating a spreadsheet that is been extracted from the database whereby I am tasked to concatenate data from 2 adjacent cells. I change the database on a frequent basis adding or removing data wherever necessary so the range of data is always different. To concatenate the two cells I use the following formula:
e.g: =IF(ISBLANK(B8&H8),"",B8&H8)
This formula works out great when im dealing with increasing amounts of data as I can simply drag the formula down as far as i want and i know that it will pick up the formula whenever I refresh the database without the need of seeing value errors when the formula ends up referring to a blank cell. The snag here (and my query as well) is if I have less data then before the formula within the last set of cells looks something like this:
e.g: =IF(ISBLANK(#REF!&#REF!),"",#REF!&#REF!)
I have dealt with #REF before in other spreadsheets whereby I simply used a ISERROR in the statement but I dont know if there is a possible way of including this within my formula. I need the ISBLANK there so I have more control and dont have to drag the formula as often.
If there is a better way around this or a way to amend the current formula Id appreciate the help :)
The only way you are going to get something like this:
=IF(ISBLANK(#REF!&#REF!),"",#REF!&#REF!)
in the formula bar is if you(or the system you are using) are somehow deleting the cells that were originally referenced. This should be avoidable. You can clear the cells referenced instead of deleting them completely - then you won't get this error - and your formulas will remain intact. Now you can certainly use the formulas provided in the comments to hide the errors - but the root of your problem seems to me to be that the errors are occuring in the first place. Good Luck.