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The formula should return 2 because only 2 containers are available. If, in
the example, this particular part is packed 350 to a container and I need 1000, and there were an unlimited number of containers available, the formula should return 3. However, if there were only 2 containers avaialble, it should return 2. Please note that this is only one of many items to be shipped and the shipment (in every instance) is an aggregate of all the items. I may have 2 containers of the first item, 5 of the second, 3 of the third and so on. Although the number of containers for an individual item is important, the total number of containers, for all items combined, cannot exceed 24. If it does, then I have to 'cherry pick' and decide what to leave off. Although I don't believe this is critical, I should note that the materials in question come off a production line and the final process results in each container quantity being variable. Because of this, I should also note that I use a second formula (in essence a duplicate of the first but instead of counting containers it sums the quantity in the containers). So, going back to the example of unlimited containers, the result shoud be 3 containers and 1,050 pcs. My original formulas sufficed so long as no single item required more than 7 containers. "loudfish" wrote: On 29 May, 14:05, ronnomad wrote: Your formula does work but only if the total quantity available to ship is greater than the quantity needed. If, as in the example I gave, the quantity available (700 pcs) is less than the quantity needed (1000 pcs), the formula result is 0 (zero). In this instance the answer should be 2 because 2 is the total number of containers available even though the quantity is less than what is needed. The only condition where the quantity available (700 pcs) is less than the quantity needed (1000 pcs) should be once you have tried the last container (the 24th one). The second formula I gave should return 24 even if there are not enough pieces in all 24 containers: .... then change the last value to be summed from a conditional IF(SUM(L37:AC37)K37*-1,24,999 to an absolute: 24 So let me restate back as a question. Why should your example above return 2 instead of moving on to the 3rd container? (and the 4th, ..... until it either finds enough pieces, or reaches the 24th container) HTH Andrew |
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