vlookup in reverse
Some people are only interested in jacking up their post count.
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Biff
Microsoft Excel MVP
"Ragdyer" wrote in message
...
How can you measure the calc time difference for 2 columns and 5 rows?
OH, you say maybe there's really more then 5 rows.
Well, maybe there's also more then 2 columns.
Most OPs are not looking for a fish ... they're looking to learn how to
fish!<g
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Regards,
RD
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"Shane Devenshire" wrote in
message ...
If you have only 2 columm why not give them each a name. Using more
INDEX
function than your first example is going to slow calculations down.
=index(Sked1st,match(d1, Sked2nd, 0))
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Cheers,
Shane Devenshire
"AJSloss" wrote:
I am trying to use a function that will read a table in reverse (from
the
right column to the left column) and so far I have this:
-table range is named "sked" and goes from a1:b5
-cell d1 is the value I want looked up
=index(a1:a5, match(d1, b1:b5, 0))
that works perfectly, however, is there a way to to use "sked" in that
formula so that it would look something like:
=index(1st column of "sked", match(d1, 2nd column of "sked", 0))
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