Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.misc
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I tried to be as detailed as possible:
I have version 2002 SP3 Can someone provide me a suggestion on formulas for the following: Scenario - Steve and Joe have red, green, yellow and blue widgets. Each widget weighs either 1,2,3 or 4 ounces. The price of the widget is based on all three variables i.e a 1 ounce red widget owned by Steve has a different cost then a 1 ounce red widget owned by Joe. So, what I need are formulas that will populate cells with the correct prices based on these variables. Ex: Steve owns six - 1 ounce red widgets. Column A contains the name of the owner (Steve / Joe) Column B contains the color of the widget. Column C contains the weight of the widget (1,2,3,4 ozs). Column D contains the number of widgets. Based on how the formulas could work, I don't mind having separate columns for the results for the different colors of widgets. For example, if column E was the column to capture the cost for the red widgets, the formula should give the answer to: If cloumn A = Steve and if Column B = red, and if column C = 1, then the result in Column E should be the amount in column D times $2 (cost of a 1 ounce red widget owned by Steve), however, if cloumn A = Steve and if Column B = red, and if column C = 2, then the result in Column E should be the amount in column D times $4 (cost of a 2 ounce red widget owned by Steve), however, if cloumn A = Steve and if Column B = red, and if column C = 3, then the result in Column E should be the amount in column D times $6 (cost of a 3 ounce red widget owned by Steve) however, if cloumn A = Steve and if Column B = red, and if column C = 4, then the result in Column E should be the amount in column D times $8 (cost of a 4 ounce red widget owned by Steve) however If cloumn A = Joe and if Column B = red, and if column C = 1, then the result in Column E should be the amount in column D times $3 (cost of a 1 ounce red widget owned by Joe), however, if cloumn A = Joe and if Column B = red, and if column C = 2, then the result in Column E should be the amount in column D times $5 (cost of a 2 ounce red widget owned by Joe), however, if cloumn A = Joe and if Column B = red, and if column C = 3, then the result in Column E should be the amount in column D times $7 (cost of a 3 ounce red widget owned by Joe) however, if cloumn A = Joe and if Column B = red, and if column C = 4, then the result in Column E should be the amount in column D times $9 (cost of a 4 ounce red widget owned by Joe) Columns F, G and H could have the same formula but with a different color for each column. I can sum the columns to get the value by color. Tx, Samoan |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Creating macros with if stmts | Excel Discussion (Misc queries) | |||
Monthly bank stmts | Excel Worksheet Functions | |||
Need more than 7 nested "IF" statements in Excel" | Excel Discussion (Misc queries) | |||
"How do I correct error in Excel2003 for nested subtotal?" | Excel Discussion (Misc queries) | |||
IF Statement that's conditional on multiple IF Stmts in other cell | Excel Worksheet Functions |