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pandeleour

Calculator in Excel
 
Hello,

I've read through some of the posts to find an answer to my problem but
without much luck. Essentially, what I'm trying to do is create a calculator
that will help me determine pricing on some items. Below is an example of
the two source columns I'm interested in using:

Fruit Price
Apple $0.10
Orange $0.20
Pear $0.30

Now I've created a drop-down list - using data validation - in one cell from
which I can select a fruit. What I'd like is for Excel to return the value
of the fruit in the cell adjacent to my selection. So, for example, if I
select "Pear" I want $0.30 to appear in the cell immediately to the right of
my selection from the drop-down list.

To further complicate the issue, I'd like to be able to add a new value (in
this case price of fruit in $cents) and have Excel return what percent above
my initial price that is. So to continue the example from above, my end
result would look something like this:

Fruit Unit Price New Price Percent Above Unit Price
Pear $0.30 $0.40 133%


I think I'm supposed to use the VLOOKUP function on a pivot chart but am
still struggling with that.

Thanks for taking the time to read my post. I realize it's long, but I
wanted to be as clear about my problem as possible. Any help would be
greatly appreciated.

Thanks

Mike

Calculator in Excel
 
Taking your question in 2 parts. The first is displaying the price of an item
from a list of items and prices, you are correct about using Vlookup and this
assumes you items are in Col A and prices are in Col B.

=VLOOKUP(D1,A1:B100,2,FALSE)

Entering the item name in Cell D1 will return the price.

For increase in price in another cell simply multiply by (say) 1.33 using

=B1*1.33 which gives the new price. You can now copy and paste this over the
original price. Note that this will reurn an error if you have simply put the
$ sign in front of your price. To get the dollar sign you must format the
cell as currency.

Mike

"pandeleour" wrote:

Hello,

I've read through some of the posts to find an answer to my problem but
without much luck. Essentially, what I'm trying to do is create a calculator
that will help me determine pricing on some items. Below is an example of
the two source columns I'm interested in using:

Fruit Price
Apple $0.10
Orange $0.20
Pear $0.30

Now I've created a drop-down list - using data validation - in one cell from
which I can select a fruit. What I'd like is for Excel to return the value
of the fruit in the cell adjacent to my selection. So, for example, if I
select "Pear" I want $0.30 to appear in the cell immediately to the right of
my selection from the drop-down list.

To further complicate the issue, I'd like to be able to add a new value (in
this case price of fruit in $cents) and have Excel return what percent above
my initial price that is. So to continue the example from above, my end
result would look something like this:

Fruit Unit Price New Price Percent Above Unit Price
Pear $0.30 $0.40 133%


I think I'm supposed to use the VLOOKUP function on a pivot chart but am
still struggling with that.

Thanks for taking the time to read my post. I realize it's long, but I
wanted to be as clear about my problem as possible. Any help would be
greatly appreciated.

Thanks


pandeleour

Calculator in Excel
 
Mike,

That worked wonderfully well, thanks!. My whole mistake was I was entering
a 4 instead of 2 (the 2 being the number in your formula below between B100
and FALSE) because I thought that part of the formula was in which column -
in my case the fourth column - I want the result to be returned, not the
number that indicates what column to search for the value of price.

Once again, thank you for your time Sir.

"Mike" wrote:

Taking your question in 2 parts. The first is displaying the price of an item
from a list of items and prices, you are correct about using Vlookup and this
assumes you items are in Col A and prices are in Col B.

=VLOOKUP(D1,A1:B100,2,FALSE)

Entering the item name in Cell D1 will return the price.

For increase in price in another cell simply multiply by (say) 1.33 using

=B1*1.33 which gives the new price. You can now copy and paste this over the
original price. Note that this will reurn an error if you have simply put the
$ sign in front of your price. To get the dollar sign you must format the
cell as currency.

Mike

"pandeleour" wrote:

Hello,

I've read through some of the posts to find an answer to my problem but
without much luck. Essentially, what I'm trying to do is create a calculator
that will help me determine pricing on some items. Below is an example of
the two source columns I'm interested in using:

Fruit Price
Apple $0.10
Orange $0.20
Pear $0.30

Now I've created a drop-down list - using data validation - in one cell from
which I can select a fruit. What I'd like is for Excel to return the value
of the fruit in the cell adjacent to my selection. So, for example, if I
select "Pear" I want $0.30 to appear in the cell immediately to the right of
my selection from the drop-down list.

To further complicate the issue, I'd like to be able to add a new value (in
this case price of fruit in $cents) and have Excel return what percent above
my initial price that is. So to continue the example from above, my end
result would look something like this:

Fruit Unit Price New Price Percent Above Unit Price
Pear $0.30 $0.40 133%


I think I'm supposed to use the VLOOKUP function on a pivot chart but am
still struggling with that.

Thanks for taking the time to read my post. I realize it's long, but I
wanted to be as clear about my problem as possible. Any help would be
greatly appreciated.

Thanks



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