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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 |
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 |
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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