View Single Post
  #4   Report Post  
Jerry W. Lewis
 
Posts: n/a
Default

I presume then that B4:B6 are calculated results. Because of decimal/
binary conversions, etc. it is possible to have slight differences
between calculated results that cannot be displayed. If you will post
(text only, please, no attachments) the formulas and the contents of
the referenced cells, I will endeavor to explain why these slight
differences are not arithmetic errors. Meanwhile, you will find that
at least one of the following formulae are not zero
=(B4-B5)
=(B4-B6)
=(B5-B6)
The parentheses in these formulas are required to see the differences
when the values are equal to 15 decimal places.

In cases such as this, rounding the results in B4:B6 is the only way to
get the expected result.

Jerry

Diane wrote:

If I increase B4:B6 to show 14 decimal places, the values
will only be 1.90000000000000 - Why would that make a
difference?

-----Original Message-----
See Help for CORREL worksheet function. The denominator

is the product

of standard deviations for x and y. The standard

deviation of B12:B14

is zero ...

Format B4:B6 to show 14 decimal places. You will find

that they are not

all equal, hence the standard deviation is small, but

not zero.

Jerry

Diane wrote:


I have a formula in cell C7, the formula is:
CORREL(B4:B6,C4:C6)

The cells have the follwing values:
B4: 1.90
B5: 1.90
B6: 1.90
C4: 2.13
C5: 1.83
C6: 3.02

Cell C7 returns: 0.000

Here's where the problem comes in.
The formula in cell C15 is: CORREL(B12:B14,C12:C14)
The cells have the follwing values:
B12: 9.50
B13: 9.50
B14: 9.50
C12: 9.56
C13: 10.26
C13: 10.16

Cell C15 returns the error: #DIV/0!

Why is the formula producing the #DIV/0! error in the
second set and not the first or vice versa?

ANY help would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks, Diane

.