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Extracting text from a cell
Hi all,
I have a list of categories to indicate employee disciplines, i.e Management Electrical Mechanical Other and so on. I have other cells within my spreadsheet that have text that includes the categories above. For example, Electrical Engineer Senior Electrical Engineer Junior Electrical Engineer I would like to search these text strings using the categories above to return only the category. Therefore, if i had A1 = Electrical Engineer, B1 needs to be a formula that gives the result of Electrical. If I then changed A1 to Mechanical Engineer, B1 needs to automatically change to Mechanical. Any suggestions -- J |
Extracting text from a cell
Try this:
With your list of categories in the range J1:J4 Enter this formula in B1: =LOOKUP(2,1/(ISNUMBER(SEARCH(J$1:J$4,A1))),J$1:J$4) Copy down as needed. Note that if a cell contains 2 or more categories: Other - Mechanical Estimator, the formula will return the *last* category that matches. In this case both Other and Mechanical are matches but Other appears in the category list after Mechanical so the result of the formula is Other. -- Biff Microsoft Excel MVP "James" wrote in message ... Hi all, I have a list of categories to indicate employee disciplines, i.e Management Electrical Mechanical Other and so on. I have other cells within my spreadsheet that have text that includes the categories above. For example, Electrical Engineer Senior Electrical Engineer Junior Electrical Engineer I would like to search these text strings using the categories above to return only the category. Therefore, if i had A1 = Electrical Engineer, B1 needs to be a formula that gives the result of Electrical. If I then changed A1 to Mechanical Engineer, B1 needs to automatically change to Mechanical. Any suggestions -- J |
Extracting text from a cell
Thanks, that works great.
If I had an employee that was entered as Mechanical Director, how would I go about classifying this guy as Management? Also if an employee was entered as Building Simulation, how would I go about classifying as Sustainability? On a separate issue, I posted a question "Dividing hours between working weeks". Have you got any thoughts on how I might tackle that? Thanking you in advance -- J "T. Valko" wrote: Try this: With your list of categories in the range J1:J4 Enter this formula in B1: =LOOKUP(2,1/(ISNUMBER(SEARCH(J$1:J$4,A1))),J$1:J$4) Copy down as needed. Note that if a cell contains 2 or more categories: Other - Mechanical Estimator, the formula will return the *last* category that matches. In this case both Other and Mechanical are matches but Other appears in the category list after Mechanical so the result of the formula is Other. -- Biff Microsoft Excel MVP "James" wrote in message ... Hi all, I have a list of categories to indicate employee disciplines, i.e Management Electrical Mechanical Other and so on. I have other cells within my spreadsheet that have text that includes the categories above. For example, Electrical Engineer Senior Electrical Engineer Junior Electrical Engineer I would like to search these text strings using the categories above to return only the category. Therefore, if i had A1 = Electrical Engineer, B1 needs to be a formula that gives the result of Electrical. If I then changed A1 to Mechanical Engineer, B1 needs to automatically change to Mechanical. Any suggestions -- J |
Extracting text from a cell
Ok, it could get a little tricky if you have lots of items that contain a
related "keyword" for another category. For example, Mechanical Director = Management and Mechanical Engineer = Mechanical. See this screencap: http://img81.imageshack.us/img81/3900/lookupex9.jpg You need to create a 2 column table. Notice in the table how I've listed Mechanical and Mechanical Director. Mechanical director is listed *after* Mechanical. Or, for the entry Mechanical Director you could use Director as the keyword. Then in the lookup table you would replace Mechanical Director = Management with Director = Management. -- Biff Microsoft Excel MVP "James" wrote in message ... Thanks, that works great. If I had an employee that was entered as Mechanical Director, how would I go about classifying this guy as Management? Also if an employee was entered as Building Simulation, how would I go about classifying as Sustainability? On a separate issue, I posted a question "Dividing hours between working weeks". Have you got any thoughts on how I might tackle that? Thanking you in advance -- J "T. Valko" wrote: Try this: With your list of categories in the range J1:J4 Enter this formula in B1: =LOOKUP(2,1/(ISNUMBER(SEARCH(J$1:J$4,A1))),J$1:J$4) Copy down as needed. Note that if a cell contains 2 or more categories: Other - Mechanical Estimator, the formula will return the *last* category that matches. In this case both Other and Mechanical are matches but Other appears in the category list after Mechanical so the result of the formula is Other. -- Biff Microsoft Excel MVP "James" wrote in message ... Hi all, I have a list of categories to indicate employee disciplines, i.e Management Electrical Mechanical Other and so on. I have other cells within my spreadsheet that have text that includes the categories above. For example, Electrical Engineer Senior Electrical Engineer Junior Electrical Engineer I would like to search these text strings using the categories above to return only the category. Therefore, if i had A1 = Electrical Engineer, B1 needs to be a formula that gives the result of Electrical. If I then changed A1 to Mechanical Engineer, B1 needs to automatically change to Mechanical. Any suggestions -- J |
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