Thread: #N/A Shortcut
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Dean[_8_] Dean[_8_] is offline
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Default #N/A Shortcut

Thanks for your help, but I'll need a little more. Inside your formula, you
have two hyphens and I don't know what that means.

Also, I thought I would need isna for a lookup function when it can't find a
match, not iserror (though I imagine it's analogous). Please clarify.

Assume that I have entries in cells a6, b6, and c6; also a7,b7, and c7. and
that the first three are 1, #n/a, and 2 and a7, b7, and c7 were 3,4, and 5.
Please write the exact formula for me. I'm thinking the result should be
1*3 + 2 *5 = 13.

Thanks again!
Dean


"Bob Phillips" wrote in message
...
=SUMPRODUCT(--(NOT(ISERROR(A1:A100))),A1:A100)

--
HTH

Bob Phillips

"Dean" wrote in message
...
Often I am using lookup functions which may or may not find an exact
match
(which is what I want). From these results, typically in a column, I

might
want to create a sum or, using two such columns, even a sumproduct
result.

The usual way I deal with this is to write an if statement that says, if

the
vlookup result is #N/A, then substitute zero. This yields long formulas
since the lookup function is already pretty long.

I'm wondering if there is a more elegant way to have the sumproduct

compute
while ignoring all entries that are #N/A. Perhaps I could do this with a
sumif type function, but I don't know how to do this.

Help, please.

Dean