I have a table with students' answers to 20 math problems like this:
A | B | C | D | E |...
------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+...
problem no | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |...
------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+...
right answer| 3 | 2 | A | 15 |...
------------+-----+-----+-----+-----+...
student1 | 3 | 4 | A | 12 |...
student2 | 2 | 2 | C | 15 |...
student3 | 3 | 2 | A | 13 |...
Now a need a column that counts the 'right' answers for each student.
I can do it this so: =(IF(D$3=D5;1;0))+(IF(E$3=E5;1;0))+(IF(F$3=F5;1;0))+...
...but it's not the nicest way :)
This is a typical use case for SUMPRODUCT:
A B C D E F G
1 problem no 1 2 3 4
2 right answer 3 2 A 15 right answers per student
3 student1 3 4 A 12 2
4 student2 2 2 C 15 2
5 student3 3 2 A 13 3
Formula in G3:
=SUMPRODUCT($B$2:$E$2=$B3:$E3)
If there are more problem numbers, then the column letters in $E$2 and $E3 have to be increased.
How it works:
SUMPRODUCT takes its inner functions as array formulas. So the $B$2:$E$2=$B3:$E3 becomes a matrix of {TRUE, FALSE, TRUE, FALSE} depending of if $B$2=$B3, $C$2=$C3, $D$2=$D3, $E$2=$E3.
In Libreoffice or Openoffice TRUE is 1 and FALSE is 0. So the SUMPRODUCT sums all TRUEs.
In Excel you have to get the boolean values in numeric context first. So the Formula in Excel will be =SUMPRODUCT(($B$2:$E$2=$B3:$E3)*1).
The formula in Row 3 then can be filled down for all student rows. The $ before the row number 2 ensures that thereby the row of the right answers not changes.
Greetings
Axel
Related
-UPDATED- Answered, thanks for all who helped.
Consider the following Google spreadsheet:
A B C D E
1 John | Bob | Sue | Tony
2 h1 2 | 1 | 3 | 2
3 h2 3 | 3 | 4 | 2
4 h3 1 | 2 | 1 | 3
5 h4 2 | 2 | 3 | 1
6 h5 2 | 1 | 1 | 3
7 h6 1 | 2 | 2 | 1
8 h7 1 | 2 | 1 | 3
Team | Player1 | Player 2 | Score
1 | John | Sue | ?
2 | Bob | Tony | ?
Each team is made of two partners, e.g. John and Sue. Each row contains a match: the team's score is the best of each member's. The team total score of the game is the sum of the match scores.
In the example:
Team 1 : John & Sue. Match scores: (3,4,1,3,2,2,1). Total score = 16.
Team 2 : Bob & Tony. Match scores: (2,3,3,2,3,2,3). Total score = 18.
Another example would be two golfers working as team and the best score between them is counted per hole, the at the end we add those up.
Can this be done using a spreadsheet?
To get the desired result, the formula comes up quite complicated:
=SUMPRODUCT(IF(MMULT((B12=$B$1:$E$1)*$B$2:$E$8,ROW(A1:A4)^0)>MMULT((C12=$B$1:$E$1)*$B$2:$E$8,ROW(A1:A4)^0),(B12=$B$1:$E$1)*$B$2:$E$8,(C12=$B$1:$E$1)*$B$2:$E$8))
but works in both Excel and GS
In Excel you can use the LARGE() function. It is the easiest option but a bit verbose.
If you want to the sum of the top 3 values in a column/row:
= large(A1:A10, 1), large(A1:A10, 2) + large(A1:A10, 3)
In Excel
If one has the new dynamic array formula LET():
=LET(x,INDEX($B$2:$E$8,0,MATCH(I2,$B$1:$E$1,0)),y,INDEX($B$2:$E$8,0,MATCH(J2,$B$1:$E$1,0)),SUMPRODUCT(((x>y)*x)+((y>=x)*(y))))
Else
=SUMPRODUCT(((INDEX($B$2:$E$8,0,MATCH(I2,$B$1:$E$1,0))>INDEX($B$2:$E$8,0,MATCH(J2,$B$1:$E$1,0)))*INDEX($B$2:$E$8,0,MATCH(I2,$B$1:$E$1,0)))+((INDEX($B$2:$E$8,0,MATCH(J2,$B$1:$E$1,0))>=INDEX($B$2:$E$8,0,MATCH(I2,$B$1:$E$1,0)))*(INDEX($B$2:$E$8,0,MATCH(J2,$B$1:$E$1,0)))))
Either of the following formulas will produce the desired sums of 16 and 18 (tested on my machine):
=ArrayFormula(SUM(IF($B$2:$B$8>$D$2:$D$8,$B$2:$B$8,$D$2:$D$8)))
=SUMPRODUCT(IF($B$2:$B$8>$D$2:$D$8,$B$2:$B$8,$D$2:$D$8))
Adjust to B->C and D->E for Bob + Tony. These formulas work by operating on arrays. They evaluate the IF statement once per cell in the B2:B8 range and generate an array of values ({3,4,1,3,2,2,1}). Then SUM or SUMPRODUCT will sum those values. ArrayFormula is necessary to force SUM to deal with the IF as an array.
Further customization can be built from here as desired. Play around with ArrayFormula and SUMPRODUCT as they have much more powerful use cases than this and have parallels in other spreadsheet softwares including Excel.
In excel, I have data divided into
Year Code Class Count
2001 RAI01 LNS 9
2001 RAI01 APRP 4
2001 RAI01 3
2002 RAI01 BPR 3
2002 RAI01 BRK 3
2003 RAI01 URE 3
2003 CFCOLLTXFT APRP 2
2003 CFCOLLTXFT BPR 2
2004 CFCOLLTXFT GRL 2
2004 CFCOLLTXFT HDS 2
2005 RAI HDS 2
where I need to find the top 3 products for that particular customer for that particular year.
The real trick here is to rank each row based on a group.
Your rank is determined by your Count column (Column D).
Your group is determined by your Year and Code (I think) columns (Column A and B respectively).
You can use this gnarly sumproduct() formula to get a rank (Starting at 1) based on the Count for each Group.
So to get a ranking for each Year and Code from 1 to whatever, in a new column next to this data:
=SUMPRODUCT(($A$2:$A$50=A2)*(B2=$B$2:$B$50)*(D2<$D$2:$D$50))+1
And copy that down. Now you can AutoFilter on this to show all rows that have a rank less than 4. You can sort this on Customer, then Year and you should have a nice list of top 3 within each year/code.
Explanation of sumproduct.
Sumproduct goes row by row and applies the math that is defined for each row. When it is done it sums the results.
As an example, take the following worksheet:
+---+---+---+
| | A | B |
+---+---+---+
| 1 | 1 | 1 |
| 2 | 1 | 4 |
| 3 | 2 | 2 |
| 4 | 4 | 1 |
| 5 | 1 | 2 |
+---+---+---+
`=SUMPRODUCT((A1:A5)*(B1:B5))`
This sumproduct will take A1*B1, A2*B2, A3*B3, A4*B4, A5*B5 and then add those five results up to give you a number. That is 1 + 4 + 4 + 4 + 1 = 15
It will also work on conditional/boolean statements returning, for each row/condition a 1 or a 0 (for True and False, which is a "Boolean" value).
As an example, take the following worksheet that holds the type of publication in a library and a count:
+---+----------+---+
| | A | B |
+---+----------+---+
| 1 | Book | 1 |
| 2 | Magazine | 4 |
| 3 | Book | 2 |
| 4 | Comic | 1 |
| 5 | Pamphlet | 2 |
+---+----------+---+
=SUMPRODUCT((A1:A5="Book")*(B1:B5))
This will test to see if A1 is "Book" and return a 1 or 0 then multiple that result by whatever is B1. Then continue for each row in the range up to row 5. The result will 1+0+2+0+0 = 3. There are 3 books in the library (it's not a very big library).
For this answer's sumproduct:
So ($A$2:$A$50=A2) says to return a 1 if A2=A2 or a 0 if A2<>A2. It does that for A2 through A50 comparing it to A2, returning a 1 or a 0.
(B2=$B$2:$B$50) will test each cell B2 through B50 to see if it is equal to B2 and return a 1 or 0 for each test.
The same is true for (D2<$D$2:$D$50) but it's testing to see if the count is less than the current cells count.
So... essentially this is saying "For all the rows 1 through 50, test to find all the other rows that have the same value in Column A and B AND have a count less than this rows count. Count all of those rows up that meet that criteria, and add 1 to it. This is the rank of this row within its group."
Copying this formula has it redetermine that rank for each row allowing you to rank and filter.
I have lot of sequential data in Excel.
The missing number in the sequence for Column A, should be populated with zero value in column B.
What formula i could use for this?
Data in excel sheet as below:
A | B
0 | 4
1 | 6
4 | 4
6 | 7
Expected output:
A | B
0 | 4
1 | 6
2 | 0
3 | 0
4 | 4
5 | 0
6 | 7
In B1 of your second table
=IFERROR(VLOOKUP(A1,original_table,2,0),0)
and drag down. Replace original_table with a reference to your first table
To illustrate the problem, consider the following data: 1,2,3,5,3,2. Enter this in a spreadsheet column and make a pivot table displaying the counts. Making use of the information in this pivot table, I want to create a new table, with counts for every value between 1 and 5.
1,1
2,2
3,2
4,0
5,1
What is a good way to do this? My first thought was to use VLOOKUP, trapping any lookup error. But GETPIVOTDATA is apparently preferred for pivot tables. In any case, I failed with both approaches.
To be a bit more specific, assume my pivot table of counts is "PivotTable1" and that I have already created a one column table holding all the needed lookup keys (i.e., the numbers from 1 to 5). What formula should I put in the second column of this new table?
So starting with this:
To illustrate the problem, consider the following data: 1,2,3,5,3,2. Enter this in a spreadsheet column and make a pivot table displaying the counts.
I then created the table like this:
X | Freq
- | ---------------------------------------------
1 | =IFERROR(GETPIVOTDATA("X",R3C1,"X",RC[-1]),0)
2 | =IFERROR(GETPIVOTDATA("X",R3C1,"X",RC[-1]),0)
3 | =IFERROR(GETPIVOTDATA("X",R3C1,"X",RC[-1]),0)
4 | =IFERROR(GETPIVOTDATA("X",R3C1,"X",RC[-1]),0)
5 | =IFERROR(GETPIVOTDATA("X",R3C1,"X",RC[-1]),0)
Or, in A1 mode:
X | Freq
- | -----------------------------------------
1 | =IFERROR(GETPIVOTDATA("X",$A$3,"X",F3),0)
2 | =IFERROR(GETPIVOTDATA("X",$A$3,"X",F4),0)
3 | =IFERROR(GETPIVOTDATA("X",$A$3,"X",F5),0)
4 | =IFERROR(GETPIVOTDATA("X",$A$3,"X",F6),0)
5 | =IFERROR(GETPIVOTDATA("X",$A$3,"X",F7),0)
The column X in my summary table is in column F.
Or as a table formula:
X | Freq
- | -------------------------------------------
1 | =IFERROR(GETPIVOTDATA("X",$A$3,"X",[#X]),0)
2 | =IFERROR(GETPIVOTDATA("X",$A$3,"X",[#X]),0)
3 | =IFERROR(GETPIVOTDATA("X",$A$3,"X",[#X]),0)
4 | =IFERROR(GETPIVOTDATA("X",$A$3,"X",[#X]),0)
5 | =IFERROR(GETPIVOTDATA("X",$A$3,"X",[#X]),0)
That gave me this result:
X | Freq
- | ----
1 | 1
2 | 2
3 | 2
4 | 0
5 | 1
If performance is not a major concern, you can bypass the pivot table and use the COUNTIF() function.
Create a list of all consecutive numbers that you want the counts for and use COUNTIF() for each of them with the first parameter being the range of your input numbers and the second being the number of the ordered result list:
A B C D
1 1 1 =COUNTIF(A:A,C1)
2 2 2 =COUNTIF(A:A,C2)
3 3 3 =COUNTIF(A:A,C3)
4 5 4 =COUNTIF(A:A,C4)
5 3 5 =COUNTIF(A:A,C5)
6 2
Am new to this so any help would be greatly appreciated.
I have an excel spread sheet with multiple columns, and I want to combine several columns into one column but maintain the same row. i.e.
from:
Name Address Phone1 Phone2 Phone3
Joe box 5 123-456-7890 Null 312-778-2564
Sue 3 w 2nd ST. 345-789-3214 156-879-5461 278-444-5687
Mike box 12 Null 666-879-4518 777-548-9851
To:
name address Phone
Joe box 5 123-456-7890
Null
312-778-2564
Sue 3 w 2nd ST. 345-789-3214
156-879-5461
278-444-5687
Mike box 12 Null
666-879-4518
777-548-9851
Say your information is in columns A and B so:
A | B
1 | z
2 | y
3 | x
To combine A and B in column C you would write the following in cell C1 and copy it down
=A1&B1
The final result would be
A | B | C
1 | z | 1z
2 | y | 2y
3 | x | 3x