Length that falls within a length interval?
Hello, John,
Thank you very much for taking the time to help.
The formula works fine to calculate the total amount, but I need to know
what amount falls inside of each interval.
I think that i will use the formula given by shg.
Thanks anyway for your time!
--
igor
"John C" wrote:
Well, this will work for the given data, but if I remember right, you had
other possible scenarios in a previous post, and without knowing other
scenarios, can't develop formula to handle those other scenarios.
In my sample, I have interval table set up as follows:
J4:K4 = 237 | 356
J5:K5 = 356 | 491
I have your two sets of stop/starts in the following cells
J8:K8 = 313 | 377
J9:K9 = 289 | 357
Formula in L8:
=VLOOKUP(J8,$J$4:$K$5,2)-J8+K8-VLOOKUP(K8,$J$4:$K$5,1)
And this was copied down to L9. This gave the results of 64 & 68 respectively.
--
** John C **
"Igorin" wrote:
Hello,
I would greatly appreciate if you could help me witht the following problem.
I have two adjacent length intervals:
Interval 1 goes from 237 Km to 356 Km.
Interval 2 goes from 356 Km to 491 Km.
I also have a table with the daily start and end points of the work done for
that day:
Work on day 1: from 313 Km to 377 Km.
Work on day 2: from 289 Km to 357 Km.
(etc.)
Is there a formula that can calculate what is the daily length that falls
within each interval?
For example:
On day 1:
Work done on interval 1 = 43 Km (356 - 313);
Work done on interval 2 = 21 Km (377 - 356).
On day 2:
Work done on interval 1 = 67 Km (356 - 289);
Work done on interval 2 = 1 Km (357 - 356).
Thank you very much for the help!
--
igor
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