I have a small challenge in excel.
Let's say I have a column called impressions and other column called cliks. I want to display the click rate on a pivot table (click rate is the ratio between clicks and impressions).
I tried (almost) everything, and unfortunately I am not being able to do it :(
As you can see from the image, I can manually calculate the click rate, however I am failing in do it inside the pivot table...
and this is how a calculated field is generated. Thank you JosieP, for your helpful comment.
Related
I'm new to Qliksense and I'm trying to generate a table as shown below. Using the Pivot table, I came up with getting near the structure, but could not add the Total row for Amount as shown for each unique value in Name. How can I add that?
Expand the dimension tab under Data about halfway down you'll see a slider to put totals on and off.
Basically, I have a set of data, with the following columns: date, price, daily price change and % change, the former two calculated using pivot table field list menu. I want to calculate the cumulative daily change over the period of time, in a next column. As it is a pivot table, it has absolute references and I cannot simply add previous day's change to a today's change one by one, due to a large data set. What is the most efficient way to do it? Thank you.
Go to pivot table option tab which appears when you select any cell in the pivot table range. The click on the drop down menu Option and deselect Generate GetPivotData.
After this, you can use the formulas as normal.
You can add additional column in the main sheet as "cumulative change". The new column can have the cumulative value and you can use summation formula for this.
Then you can take this value in pivot table for further analysis.
Take the help of Vlookup also.
You can follow the steps in the video below for detail pivot analysis as per your need.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vzd7RUGloXM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wsCxOmsMq6k
I have a pivot table in Excel, and I'm trying to do some calculations on the results. This is all fine and good, but I'm running into a problem due to the grouping of a pivot table.
I have a dataset indicating transaction history for a particular client/patient at a vet clinic. These are reflected by clientID and patient name in my pivot table. I've used a pivot table to group by client then patient to see when the first purchase was made and how many total purchases there have been. I want to then do a calculation on that for each patient.
My problem is here. Excel has all the data for each client grouped in what I'll call "tier 1 results". The only data I want to do the calculation on are the "tier 2 results". These are row 7 and then rows 8-9 in the screenshot below.
In effect, I wan to include something in the equation in column F to ignore any bold text, but Excel doesn't appear to be able to do this. VBA is an obvious solution for me, but I'm creating steps for salespeople to use to analyze the data while they're out in the field. We need to keep things as simple as possible. Copying and pasting an in-cell equation is one thing, but using VBA is way over their heads.
Any thoughts on how to ignore the tier 1 results?
Your pivot table uses compact form layout, where all the groupings appear in one column. You can change that to tabular form to have each group level in its own column. The screenshot shows the difference:
Click a cell in the pivot table and then Pivot table Design ribbon > Report Layout dropdown > Tabular form. There are other settings to get rid of subtotal rows, etc.
Now you can build formulas that take into account only the level that you require. (It is also possible to repeat the pivot group labels for each group level where there are blanks.)
I'm trying to change the way a pivot table displays values that im trying to track on a month to month basis. Below is a picture of what I have vs what I would like:
The first table is what I have. The second table is one I manually created to show what I would like displayed. Basically what I want to display is the % of total in column P for all of the highlighted cells in column F through O. I cant figure this one out after a good bit of trial and error and googling. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Here is an additional picture to add clarity to what I'm trying to display:
It is not clear what the percentages relate to in your screenshot.
In a pivot table you can set the values to display as percentages, with a few different options, like percentage of total, percentage of column, percentage of row, etc.
This Microsoft Support article has the details how to set it up.
I am using an Excel 2010 pivot table to display data. I need the sub totals in most columns but some columns display percentages and totaling the percentages is not correct and displays confusing values. Is there any way I can choose which columns not to total.
It's hard to make sure I'm accurately addressing your question without more detail about your data, but I will provide a simple example.
Recommendation
I would suggest that you put all measures/values in the Values area of the Pivot Table, and not in the Row Labels. That way, you will not get Row sub-totals for values.
In order to address the non-additive totals and sub-totals for your percentages, I recommend that you remove the pre-calculated percentages from your Pivot Table Values and instead use a Calculated Field that is calculated within the Pivot Table itself from the base data, and will provide correct aggregate totals and sub-totals.
Example
See below:
Method
In order to create a Calculated Field using the Ribbon, select your Pivot Table, and then go to PivotTable Tools --> Options --> Fields, Items, & Sets --> Calculated Field.
Then, enter a name for the new Field (CalcPercentSoldUnits in my example below), as well as the formula definition for the field ( =UnitsSold /UnitsProduced in my example below). Click 'Add' to create the field and then 'OK' to exit the dialog box.
Now you have created a derived field not in your base data table, but in your Pivot Table, which can be used just like a normal field. You can also see that it will calculate totals and sub-totals correctly because instead of adding constants, it is calculating based on the sums of other constants from which the percentages are derived.
In some cases depending on how your data is structured, you may need to create a Calculated Item instead of a Calculated Field.
I hope this helps - if this doesn't address your situation, please post additional examples of your data and desired results. Thanks!
I have the same problem. Some Columns should be totaled, and others should not be. The only thing I figured out is to Grand Total all columns, then format those cells in the Grand total so that the font color matches the background color. This hides those selected Grand Totals from being viewed and/or printed. I experimented by expanding the Pivot Table rows, and the formatting for the selected cells followed into the new cell(s) and when I removed some of the rows, the formatting followed as well.
Wherever you don't want to show the total columns simply hide the column in the total section. I couldn't find any other way to do it.
Be careful about things like distinct/unique counts. This method helps with percentages, but you don't want to sum or average or otherwise aggregate unique counts. I would prefer to be able to just exclude a total for a single field but haven't found a method to do so.
I think I have a similar situation and a great answer for presentation purposes. I'm billing a customer for unbilled items; my pivot shows Qty, rate, and total missed revenue (qty*rate) for each month. Having a sum of Qty and Revenue makes sense for each month, but totaling the rates of the items doesn't. Pivot table and value options are an all-or-none solution. Rather, I just selected the totals I needed to hide and formatted them with white font color (blue for the grand total). My pivot table looks great now with this band-aid approach.