"THEFALLGUY" wrote in message
...
"THEFALLGUY" wrote:
I have a scenario that has 5 scenarios, and I need to nest them into
one
formula within a single cell:
IF(IX,IF(H<W,X-W,X-H))
IF(I<=X,IF(H=W,I-H,I-W))
IF NEITHER OF THE ABOVE STATEMENTS IS TRUE, THEN RETURN '0'
Here are the five scenarios broken down:
1) H<U, IV
2) H=U, IV
3) H=U, I<=V
4) H<U, I<=V
5) None of the above, so return '0'
and later said:
"All 'U's should be 'W's and all 'V's should be 'X's"
Hence:
" Here are the five scenarios broken down:
1) H<W, IX
2) H=W, IX
3) H=W, I<=X
4) H<W, I<=X
5) None of the above, so return '0'"
Thank you for any help,
THEFALLGUY
"Mark Hone" wrote:
Hi TheFallGuy,
Given that your two IF statements cover all possibilities with respect to
the relationship between I and X, you could combine them into one
statement
as follows:
=IF(IX,IF(H<W,X-W,X-H),IF(H=W,I-H,I-W))
This is basically inserting the second IF statement into the 'value if
false' parameter of the first IF statement.
As far as I can tell from your logic, it is impossible for both
statements
to be false so a value of zero need not be returned.
Hope this helps,
Mark
Mark,
Thank you for your input. However, there are scenarios where the values
do
not fall within the two If Statements, and thus should be '0'. The
formula
in my second post is producing the correct solution, but it does not
produce
clean data for the cells that should have a '0' value.
David
How can you get a case where it doesn't fit your first two IF statements?
Is I X ?
Is H < W ?
Each of the above questions has two possible answers. Combining these,
there are 4 possible answers. There isn't a 5th option.
--
David Biddulph
Rowing web pages at
http://www.biddulph.org.uk/
and
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homep...avid_biddulph/