#1   Report Post  
Maggie
 
Posts: n/a
Default ZERO VALUES

--A1=1 AND A2=1 AND WHEN I DIVIDE A1 BY A2 THEN IN A3 I GET 1. HOWEVER, WHEN
BOTH A1 AND A2 EQUAL ZERO THEN I WOULD LIKE A3 TO EQUAL ZERO IN STEAD OF THE
#DIV/0 VALUE WHEN BOTH ARE ZERO. SO THERE STILL
NEEDS TO BE A DIVISION CALCULATION BUT WHEN THEY ARE BOTH ZERO IT WOULD THEN
BE ZERO IN A3.--


Maggie
  #2   Report Post  
Anne Troy
 
Posts: n/a
Default ZERO VALUES

=if(iserror(yourformula),0,yourformula).
************
Anne Troy
www.OfficeArticles.com

"Maggie" wrote in message
...
--A1=1 AND A2=1 AND WHEN I DIVIDE A1 BY A2 THEN IN A3 I GET 1. HOWEVER,
WHEN
BOTH A1 AND A2 EQUAL ZERO THEN I WOULD LIKE A3 TO EQUAL ZERO IN STEAD OF
THE
#DIV/0 VALUE WHEN BOTH ARE ZERO. SO THERE STILL
NEEDS TO BE A DIVISION CALCULATION BUT WHEN THEY ARE BOTH ZERO IT WOULD
THEN
BE ZERO IN A3.--


Maggie



  #3   Report Post  
Maggie
 
Posts: n/a
Default ZERO VALUES

YOU ARE A LIFE SAVER. THANK YOU!!!!!
--
Maggie


"Anne Troy" wrote:

=if(iserror(yourformula),0,yourformula).
************
Anne Troy
www.OfficeArticles.com

"Maggie" wrote in message
...
--A1=1 AND A2=1 AND WHEN I DIVIDE A1 BY A2 THEN IN A3 I GET 1. HOWEVER,
WHEN
BOTH A1 AND A2 EQUAL ZERO THEN I WOULD LIKE A3 TO EQUAL ZERO IN STEAD OF
THE
#DIV/0 VALUE WHEN BOTH ARE ZERO. SO THERE STILL
NEEDS TO BE A DIVISION CALCULATION BUT WHEN THEY ARE BOTH ZERO IT WOULD
THEN
BE ZERO IN A3.--


Maggie




  #4   Report Post  
Anne Troy
 
Posts: n/a
Default ZERO VALUES

Cool. But I'd much rather be a Snickers!! :)
Glad to help.
************
Anne Troy
www.OfficeArticles.com

"Maggie" wrote in message
...
YOU ARE A LIFE SAVER. THANK YOU!!!!!
--
Maggie


"Anne Troy" wrote:

=if(iserror(yourformula),0,yourformula).
************
Anne Troy
www.OfficeArticles.com

"Maggie" wrote in message
...
--A1=1 AND A2=1 AND WHEN I DIVIDE A1 BY A2 THEN IN A3 I GET 1. HOWEVER,
WHEN
BOTH A1 AND A2 EQUAL ZERO THEN I WOULD LIKE A3 TO EQUAL ZERO IN STEAD
OF
THE
#DIV/0 VALUE WHEN BOTH ARE ZERO. SO THERE STILL
NEEDS TO BE A DIVISION CALCULATION BUT WHEN THEY ARE BOTH ZERO IT WOULD
THEN
BE ZERO IN A3.--


Maggie






  #5   Report Post  
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.misc
Kate
 
Posts: n/a
Default ZERO VALUES

Here is my formula:

Specificity %:(([Sum Of SumOfTrue (-)]/([Sum Of SumOfTrue (-)]+[Sum Of
SumOfFalse (+)]))*100)

In my case, the Sum of SumOfTrue (-) will sometimes be a sum of zero but any
of these totals could have a zero sum.

Thanks for any and all help.


"Anne Troy" wrote:

Cool. But I'd much rather be a Snickers!! :)
Glad to help.
************
Anne Troy
www.OfficeArticles.com

"Maggie" wrote in message
...
YOU ARE A LIFE SAVER. THANK YOU!!!!!
--
Maggie


"Anne Troy" wrote:

=if(iserror(yourformula),0,yourformula).
************
Anne Troy
www.OfficeArticles.com

"Maggie" wrote in message
...
--A1=1 AND A2=1 AND WHEN I DIVIDE A1 BY A2 THEN IN A3 I GET 1. HOWEVER,
WHEN
BOTH A1 AND A2 EQUAL ZERO THEN I WOULD LIKE A3 TO EQUAL ZERO IN STEAD
OF
THE
#DIV/0 VALUE WHEN BOTH ARE ZERO. SO THERE STILL
NEEDS TO BE A DIVISION CALCULATION BUT WHEN THEY ARE BOTH ZERO IT WOULD
THEN
BE ZERO IN A3.--


Maggie






Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Using Match function with duplicate values in an array Richard Excel Worksheet Functions 3 April 22nd 23 07:45 PM
How can I break values apart that are in the same cell? Phil Excel Worksheet Functions 3 October 4th 05 03:41 PM
Count Intervals of Filtered TEXT values in Column and Return Count across a Row Sam via OfficeKB.com Excel Worksheet Functions 9 July 31st 05 03:37 AM
Combine FREQUENCY and SUM of Associated Values MichaelC Excel Worksheet Functions 3 July 3rd 05 01:54 AM
Second serie doesn't use X-as values JackRnl Charts and Charting in Excel 1 January 20th 05 01:04 AM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 03:48 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 ExcelBanter.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about Microsoft Excel"