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using sumifs to sum based on month, and criteria
Hi.
I have a table of entries, structured in the following way: Column A contains dates. Column B contains a data validated list. Column D contains values. I now wish to go through all the rows in the list, and sum the values if 1) the value of the cell in column B matches "criteria", and 2) the date in column A is in a specific month. I tried the following formula to sum over all dates in April, without success: =SUMIFS(D1:D10;A1:A10;MONTH=4;B1:B10;"criteria") I suspect my use of the MONTH function is a bit unorthodox, but can't seem to figure out the proper way to do it. I would greatly appreciate any help! /Jonas |
using sumifs to sum based on month, and criteria
=SUMPRODUCT(--(MONTH(A1:A10)=4);--(B1:B10="criteria");D1:D10)
-- --- HTH Bob (there's no email, no snail mail, but somewhere should be gmail in my addy) "Jonas" wrote in message ... Hi. I have a table of entries, structured in the following way: Column A contains dates. Column B contains a data validated list. Column D contains values. I now wish to go through all the rows in the list, and sum the values if 1) the value of the cell in column B matches "criteria", and 2) the date in column A is in a specific month. I tried the following formula to sum over all dates in April, without success: =SUMIFS(D1:D10;A1:A10;MONTH=4;B1:B10;"criteria") I suspect my use of the MONTH function is a bit unorthodox, but can't seem to figure out the proper way to do it. I would greatly appreciate any help! /Jonas |
using sumifs to sum based on month, and criteria
MONTH=4? MONTH of what?
Did you look in Help for the usage of MONTH? Tyro "Jonas" wrote in message ... Hi. I have a table of entries, structured in the following way: Column A contains dates. Column B contains a data validated list. Column D contains values. I now wish to go through all the rows in the list, and sum the values if 1) the value of the cell in column B matches "criteria", and 2) the date in column A is in a specific month. I tried the following formula to sum over all dates in April, without success: =SUMIFS(D1:D10;A1:A10;MONTH=4;B1:B10;"criteria") I suspect my use of the MONTH function is a bit unorthodox, but can't seem to figure out the proper way to do it. I would greatly appreciate any help! /Jonas |
using sumifs to sum based on month, and criteria
I think Bob's formulas are supposed to contain commas, not semicolons, as such:
=SUMPRODUCT(--(MONTH(A1:A10)=4),--(B1:B10="criteria"),D1:D10) Also, you may consider this: =COUNTIF(A1:A9,"=4")+COUNTIF(B1:B9,"criteria") However, that may not yield the results you are after. Finally, a pivot table would do it for you, but I think you'd have to add a helper column, and you have to use something like the =month() function. Regards, Ryan--- -- RyGuy "Tyro" wrote: MONTH=4? MONTH of what? Did you look in Help for the usage of MONTH? Tyro "Jonas" wrote in message ... Hi. I have a table of entries, structured in the following way: Column A contains dates. Column B contains a data validated list. Column D contains values. I now wish to go through all the rows in the list, and sum the values if 1) the value of the cell in column B matches "criteria", and 2) the date in column A is in a specific month. I tried the following formula to sum over all dates in April, without success: =SUMIFS(D1:D10;A1:A10;MONTH=4;B1:B10;"criteria") I suspect my use of the MONTH function is a bit unorthodox, but can't seem to figure out the proper way to do it. I would greatly appreciate any help! /Jonas |
using sumifs to sum based on month, and criteria
No they are meant to contain semi-colons, as did the OPs, because presumably
he has a continental Excel. -- --- HTH Bob (there's no email, no snail mail, but somewhere should be gmail in my addy) "ryguy7272" wrote in message ... I think Bob's formulas are supposed to contain commas, not semicolons, as such: =SUMPRODUCT(--(MONTH(A1:A10)=4),--(B1:B10="criteria"),D1:D10) Also, you may consider this: =COUNTIF(A1:A9,"=4")+COUNTIF(B1:B9,"criteria") However, that may not yield the results you are after. Finally, a pivot table would do it for you, but I think you'd have to add a helper column, and you have to use something like the =month() function. Regards, Ryan--- -- RyGuy "Tyro" wrote: MONTH=4? MONTH of what? Did you look in Help for the usage of MONTH? Tyro "Jonas" wrote in message ... Hi. I have a table of entries, structured in the following way: Column A contains dates. Column B contains a data validated list. Column D contains values. I now wish to go through all the rows in the list, and sum the values if 1) the value of the cell in column B matches "criteria", and 2) the date in column A is in a specific month. I tried the following formula to sum over all dates in April, without success: =SUMIFS(D1:D10;A1:A10;MONTH=4;B1:B10;"criteria") I suspect my use of the MONTH function is a bit unorthodox, but can't seem to figure out the proper way to do it. I would greatly appreciate any help! /Jonas |
using sumifs to sum based on month, and criteria
True, but semi-colons are used for commas. To my understanding, they do not
replace the need for arguments enclosed in parentheses. MONTH=4 is exactly what is says it is. It is not MONTH(date). =SUMIFS(D1:D10;A1:A10;MONTH=4;B1:B10;"criteria") does not contain parentheses to enclose the date argument to the MONTH function, as far as I can ascertain. Even if the semi-colons were replaced by commas, it is still MONTH=4. MONTH of what? Tyro "Bob Phillips" wrote in message ... No they are meant to contain semi-colons, as did the OPs, because presumably he has a continental Excel. -- --- HTH Bob (there's no email, no snail mail, but somewhere should be gmail in my addy) "ryguy7272" wrote in message ... I think Bob's formulas are supposed to contain commas, not semicolons, as such: =SUMPRODUCT(--(MONTH(A1:A10)=4),--(B1:B10="criteria"),D1:D10) Also, you may consider this: =COUNTIF(A1:A9,"=4")+COUNTIF(B1:B9,"criteria") However, that may not yield the results you are after. Finally, a pivot table would do it for you, but I think you'd have to add a helper column, and you have to use something like the =month() function. Regards, Ryan--- -- RyGuy "Tyro" wrote: MONTH=4? MONTH of what? Did you look in Help for the usage of MONTH? Tyro "Jonas" wrote in message ... Hi. I have a table of entries, structured in the following way: Column A contains dates. Column B contains a data validated list. Column D contains values. I now wish to go through all the rows in the list, and sum the values if 1) the value of the cell in column B matches "criteria", and 2) the date in column A is in a specific month. I tried the following formula to sum over all dates in April, without success: =SUMIFS(D1:D10;A1:A10;MONTH=4;B1:B10;"criteria") I suspect my use of the MONTH function is a bit unorthodox, but can't seem to figure out the proper way to do it. I would greatly appreciate any help! /Jonas |
using sumifs to sum based on month, and criteria
Where did Bob use month without arguments?
-- Regards, Peo Sjoblom "Tyro" wrote in message ... True, but semi-colons are used for commas. To my understanding, they do not replace the need for arguments enclosed in parentheses. MONTH=4 is exactly what is says it is. It is not MONTH(date). =SUMIFS(D1:D10;A1:A10;MONTH=4;B1:B10;"criteria") does not contain parentheses to enclose the date argument to the MONTH function, as far as I can ascertain. Even if the semi-colons were replaced by commas, it is still MONTH=4. MONTH of what? Tyro "Bob Phillips" wrote in message ... No they are meant to contain semi-colons, as did the OPs, because presumably he has a continental Excel. -- --- HTH Bob (there's no email, no snail mail, but somewhere should be gmail in my addy) "ryguy7272" wrote in message ... I think Bob's formulas are supposed to contain commas, not semicolons, as such: =SUMPRODUCT(--(MONTH(A1:A10)=4),--(B1:B10="criteria"),D1:D10) Also, you may consider this: =COUNTIF(A1:A9,"=4")+COUNTIF(B1:B9,"criteria") However, that may not yield the results you are after. Finally, a pivot table would do it for you, but I think you'd have to add a helper column, and you have to use something like the =month() function. Regards, Ryan--- -- RyGuy "Tyro" wrote: MONTH=4? MONTH of what? Did you look in Help for the usage of MONTH? Tyro "Jonas" wrote in message ... Hi. I have a table of entries, structured in the following way: Column A contains dates. Column B contains a data validated list. Column D contains values. I now wish to go through all the rows in the list, and sum the values if 1) the value of the cell in column B matches "criteria", and 2) the date in column A is in a specific month. I tried the following formula to sum over all dates in April, without success: =SUMIFS(D1:D10;A1:A10;MONTH=4;B1:B10;"criteria") I suspect my use of the MONTH function is a bit unorthodox, but can't seem to figure out the proper way to do it. I would greatly appreciate any help! /Jonas |
using sumifs to sum based on month, and criteria
Jonas did. I misposted. Simply that. And you knew it.
Tyro "Peo Sjoblom" wrote in message ... Where did Bob use month without arguments? -- Regards, Peo Sjoblom "Tyro" wrote in message ... True, but semi-colons are used for commas. To my understanding, they do not replace the need for arguments enclosed in parentheses. MONTH=4 is exactly what is says it is. It is not MONTH(date). =SUMIFS(D1:D10;A1:A10;MONTH=4;B1:B10;"criteria") does not contain parentheses to enclose the date argument to the MONTH function, as far as I can ascertain. Even if the semi-colons were replaced by commas, it is still MONTH=4. MONTH of what? Tyro "Bob Phillips" wrote in message ... No they are meant to contain semi-colons, as did the OPs, because presumably he has a continental Excel. -- --- HTH Bob (there's no email, no snail mail, but somewhere should be gmail in my addy) "ryguy7272" wrote in message ... I think Bob's formulas are supposed to contain commas, not semicolons, as such: =SUMPRODUCT(--(MONTH(A1:A10)=4),--(B1:B10="criteria"),D1:D10) Also, you may consider this: =COUNTIF(A1:A9,"=4")+COUNTIF(B1:B9,"criteria") However, that may not yield the results you are after. Finally, a pivot table would do it for you, but I think you'd have to add a helper column, and you have to use something like the =month() function. Regards, Ryan--- -- RyGuy "Tyro" wrote: MONTH=4? MONTH of what? Did you look in Help for the usage of MONTH? Tyro "Jonas" wrote in message ... Hi. I have a table of entries, structured in the following way: Column A contains dates. Column B contains a data validated list. Column D contains values. I now wish to go through all the rows in the list, and sum the values if 1) the value of the cell in column B matches "criteria", and 2) the date in column A is in a specific month. I tried the following formula to sum over all dates in April, without success: =SUMIFS(D1:D10;A1:A10;MONTH=4;B1:B10;"criteria") I suspect my use of the MONTH function is a bit unorthodox, but can't seem to figure out the proper way to do it. I would greatly appreciate any help! /Jonas |
using sumifs to sum based on month, and criteria
Who are you arguing with, me, the OP, or ryguy7272? You picked up on the OP
(irrelevantly AFAICS), and ryguy7272 picked up on me (incorrectly as it turns out) but he made the mistake of replying to your posting, not mine in the thread. My response was to ryguy7272 pointing out that it was correct to use semi-colons if you have a continental version of Excel, it was not to you, was not appended to yours. You have managed to mix up three posts, completely failed to get the gist of the OPs question (I may have also, but you definitely did), he was trying to show what he had tried but failed to get working. And semi-colons are not used for commas, they are used as a separator of function arguments. You do not use commas, because on the continent, commas are used as the decimal separator for numbers, so they cannot be used as the argument separator. -- --- HTH Bob (there's no email, no snail mail, but somewhere should be gmail in my addy) "Tyro" wrote in message ... True, but semi-colons are used for commas. To my understanding, they do not replace the need for arguments enclosed in parentheses. MONTH=4 is exactly what is says it is. It is not MONTH(date). =SUMIFS(D1:D10;A1:A10;MONTH=4;B1:B10;"criteria") does not contain parentheses to enclose the date argument to the MONTH function, as far as I can ascertain. Even if the semi-colons were replaced by commas, it is still MONTH=4. MONTH of what? Tyro "Bob Phillips" wrote in message ... No they are meant to contain semi-colons, as did the OPs, because presumably he has a continental Excel. -- --- HTH Bob (there's no email, no snail mail, but somewhere should be gmail in my addy) "ryguy7272" wrote in message ... I think Bob's formulas are supposed to contain commas, not semicolons, as such: =SUMPRODUCT(--(MONTH(A1:A10)=4),--(B1:B10="criteria"),D1:D10) Also, you may consider this: =COUNTIF(A1:A9,"=4")+COUNTIF(B1:B9,"criteria") However, that may not yield the results you are after. Finally, a pivot table would do it for you, but I think you'd have to add a helper column, and you have to use something like the =month() function. Regards, Ryan--- -- RyGuy "Tyro" wrote: MONTH=4? MONTH of what? Did you look in Help for the usage of MONTH? Tyro "Jonas" wrote in message ... Hi. I have a table of entries, structured in the following way: Column A contains dates. Column B contains a data validated list. Column D contains values. I now wish to go through all the rows in the list, and sum the values if 1) the value of the cell in column B matches "criteria", and 2) the date in column A is in a specific month. I tried the following formula to sum over all dates in April, without success: =SUMIFS(D1:D10;A1:A10;MONTH=4;B1:B10;"criteria") I suspect my use of the MONTH function is a bit unorthodox, but can't seem to figure out the proper way to do it. I would greatly appreciate any help! /Jonas |
using sumifs to sum based on month, and criteria
If you are addressing me, I am simply stating that the MONTH function
requires a date! As in MONTH(date). Semi-colons and commas are not the issue. The OP posted =SUMIFS(D1:D10;A1:A10;MONTH=4;B1:B10;"criteria") I repeat, where is the date for the month function to evaluate?????? Tyro "Bob Phillips" wrote in message ... Who are you arguing with, me, the OP, or ryguy7272? You picked up on the OP (irrelevantly AFAICS), and ryguy7272 picked up on me (incorrectly as it turns out) but he made the mistake of replying to your posting, not mine in the thread. My response was to ryguy7272 pointing out that it was correct to use semi-colons if you have a continental version of Excel, it was not to you, was not appended to yours. You have managed to mix up three posts, completely failed to get the gist of the OPs question (I may have also, but you definitely did), he was trying to show what he had tried but failed to get working. And semi-colons are not used for commas, they are used as a separator of function arguments. You do not use commas, because on the continent, commas are used as the decimal separator for numbers, so they cannot be used as the argument separator. -- --- HTH Bob (there's no email, no snail mail, but somewhere should be gmail in my addy) "Tyro" wrote in message ... True, but semi-colons are used for commas. To my understanding, they do not replace the need for arguments enclosed in parentheses. MONTH=4 is exactly what is says it is. It is not MONTH(date). =SUMIFS(D1:D10;A1:A10;MONTH=4;B1:B10;"criteria") does not contain parentheses to enclose the date argument to the MONTH function, as far as I can ascertain. Even if the semi-colons were replaced by commas, it is still MONTH=4. MONTH of what? Tyro "Bob Phillips" wrote in message ... No they are meant to contain semi-colons, as did the OPs, because presumably he has a continental Excel. -- --- HTH Bob (there's no email, no snail mail, but somewhere should be gmail in my addy) "ryguy7272" wrote in message ... I think Bob's formulas are supposed to contain commas, not semicolons, as such: =SUMPRODUCT(--(MONTH(A1:A10)=4),--(B1:B10="criteria"),D1:D10) Also, you may consider this: =COUNTIF(A1:A9,"=4")+COUNTIF(B1:B9,"criteria") However, that may not yield the results you are after. Finally, a pivot table would do it for you, but I think you'd have to add a helper column, and you have to use something like the =month() function. Regards, Ryan--- -- RyGuy "Tyro" wrote: MONTH=4? MONTH of what? Did you look in Help for the usage of MONTH? Tyro "Jonas" wrote in message ... Hi. I have a table of entries, structured in the following way: Column A contains dates. Column B contains a data validated list. Column D contains values. I now wish to go through all the rows in the list, and sum the values if 1) the value of the cell in column B matches "criteria", and 2) the date in column A is in a specific month. I tried the following formula to sum over all dates in April, without success: =SUMIFS(D1:D10;A1:A10;MONTH=4;B1:B10;"criteria") I suspect my use of the MONTH function is a bit unorthodox, but can't seem to figure out the proper way to do it. I would greatly appreciate any help! /Jonas |
using sumifs to sum based on month, and criteria
Hey guys, thanks for all the help.
Sorry about the confusion. Through my example, I was trying to illustrate what I had tried, but is not working. I tried using the MONTH function without parenthesis, in hope that the SUMIFS function would apply it to the range A1:A10. Basically, what I am trying to do is this: For each row in the list; if the date in column A corresponds to the month of April; and if the value in column B corresponds to 'criteria'; sum the values in column D. Hope this makes my intentions more clear. /Jonas "Tyro" wrote: If you are addressing me, I am simply stating that the MONTH function requires a date! As in MONTH(date). Semi-colons and commas are not the issue. The OP posted =SUMIFS(D1:D10;A1:A10;MONTH=4;B1:B10;"criteria") I repeat, where is the date for the month function to evaluate?????? Tyro "Bob Phillips" wrote in message ... Who are you arguing with, me, the OP, or ryguy7272? You picked up on the OP (irrelevantly AFAICS), and ryguy7272 picked up on me (incorrectly as it turns out) but he made the mistake of replying to your posting, not mine in the thread. My response was to ryguy7272 pointing out that it was correct to use semi-colons if you have a continental version of Excel, it was not to you, was not appended to yours. You have managed to mix up three posts, completely failed to get the gist of the OPs question (I may have also, but you definitely did), he was trying to show what he had tried but failed to get working. And semi-colons are not used for commas, they are used as a separator of function arguments. You do not use commas, because on the continent, commas are used as the decimal separator for numbers, so they cannot be used as the argument separator. -- --- HTH Bob (there's no email, no snail mail, but somewhere should be gmail in my addy) "Tyro" wrote in message ... True, but semi-colons are used for commas. To my understanding, they do not replace the need for arguments enclosed in parentheses. MONTH=4 is exactly what is says it is. It is not MONTH(date). =SUMIFS(D1:D10;A1:A10;MONTH=4;B1:B10;"criteria") does not contain parentheses to enclose the date argument to the MONTH function, as far as I can ascertain. Even if the semi-colons were replaced by commas, it is still MONTH=4. MONTH of what? Tyro "Bob Phillips" wrote in message ... No they are meant to contain semi-colons, as did the OPs, because presumably he has a continental Excel. -- --- HTH Bob (there's no email, no snail mail, but somewhere should be gmail in my addy) "ryguy7272" wrote in message ... I think Bob's formulas are supposed to contain commas, not semicolons, as such: =SUMPRODUCT(--(MONTH(A1:A10)=4),--(B1:B10="criteria"),D1:D10) Also, you may consider this: =COUNTIF(A1:A9,"=4")+COUNTIF(B1:B9,"criteria") However, that may not yield the results you are after. Finally, a pivot table would do it for you, but I think you'd have to add a helper column, and you have to use something like the =month() function. Regards, Ryan--- -- RyGuy "Tyro" wrote: MONTH=4? MONTH of what? Did you look in Help for the usage of MONTH? Tyro "Jonas" wrote in message ... Hi. I have a table of entries, structured in the following way: Column A contains dates. Column B contains a data validated list. Column D contains values. I now wish to go through all the rows in the list, and sum the values if 1) the value of the cell in column B matches "criteria", and 2) the date in column A is in a specific month. I tried the following formula to sum over all dates in April, without success: =SUMIFS(D1:D10;A1:A10;MONTH=4;B1:B10;"criteria") I suspect my use of the MONTH function is a bit unorthodox, but can't seem to figure out the proper way to do it. I would greatly appreciate any help! /Jonas |
using sumifs to sum based on month, and criteria
No ned to apologise, you were perfectly clear in your intent even if you got
the syntax wrong. The confusion was caused elsewhere, not by you. You can't do it with SUMIFS as I stated earlier. Did you try my suggestion? -- --- HTH Bob (there's no email, no snail mail, but somewhere should be gmail in my addy) "Jonas" wrote in message ... Hey guys, thanks for all the help. Sorry about the confusion. Through my example, I was trying to illustrate what I had tried, but is not working. I tried using the MONTH function without parenthesis, in hope that the SUMIFS function would apply it to the range A1:A10. Basically, what I am trying to do is this: For each row in the list; if the date in column A corresponds to the month of April; and if the value in column B corresponds to 'criteria'; sum the values in column D. Hope this makes my intentions more clear. /Jonas "Tyro" wrote: If you are addressing me, I am simply stating that the MONTH function requires a date! As in MONTH(date). Semi-colons and commas are not the issue. The OP posted =SUMIFS(D1:D10;A1:A10;MONTH=4;B1:B10;"criteria") I repeat, where is the date for the month function to evaluate?????? Tyro "Bob Phillips" wrote in message ... Who are you arguing with, me, the OP, or ryguy7272? You picked up on the OP (irrelevantly AFAICS), and ryguy7272 picked up on me (incorrectly as it turns out) but he made the mistake of replying to your posting, not mine in the thread. My response was to ryguy7272 pointing out that it was correct to use semi-colons if you have a continental version of Excel, it was not to you, was not appended to yours. You have managed to mix up three posts, completely failed to get the gist of the OPs question (I may have also, but you definitely did), he was trying to show what he had tried but failed to get working. And semi-colons are not used for commas, they are used as a separator of function arguments. You do not use commas, because on the continent, commas are used as the decimal separator for numbers, so they cannot be used as the argument separator. -- --- HTH Bob (there's no email, no snail mail, but somewhere should be gmail in my addy) "Tyro" wrote in message ... True, but semi-colons are used for commas. To my understanding, they do not replace the need for arguments enclosed in parentheses. MONTH=4 is exactly what is says it is. It is not MONTH(date). =SUMIFS(D1:D10;A1:A10;MONTH=4;B1:B10;"criteria") does not contain parentheses to enclose the date argument to the MONTH function, as far as I can ascertain. Even if the semi-colons were replaced by commas, it is still MONTH=4. MONTH of what? Tyro "Bob Phillips" wrote in message ... No they are meant to contain semi-colons, as did the OPs, because presumably he has a continental Excel. -- --- HTH Bob (there's no email, no snail mail, but somewhere should be gmail in my addy) "ryguy7272" wrote in message ... I think Bob's formulas are supposed to contain commas, not semicolons, as such: =SUMPRODUCT(--(MONTH(A1:A10)=4),--(B1:B10="criteria"),D1:D10) Also, you may consider this: =COUNTIF(A1:A9,"=4")+COUNTIF(B1:B9,"criteria") However, that may not yield the results you are after. Finally, a pivot table would do it for you, but I think you'd have to add a helper column, and you have to use something like the =month() function. Regards, Ryan--- -- RyGuy "Tyro" wrote: MONTH=4? MONTH of what? Did you look in Help for the usage of MONTH? Tyro "Jonas" wrote in message ... Hi. I have a table of entries, structured in the following way: Column A contains dates. Column B contains a data validated list. Column D contains values. I now wish to go through all the rows in the list, and sum the values if 1) the value of the cell in column B matches "criteria", and 2) the date in column A is in a specific month. I tried the following formula to sum over all dates in April, without success: =SUMIFS(D1:D10;A1:A10;MONTH=4;B1:B10;"criteria") I suspect my use of the MONTH function is a bit unorthodox, but can't seem to figure out the proper way to do it. I would greatly appreciate any help! /Jonas |
using sumifs to sum based on month, and criteria
Yes Bob, it works perfectly - thanks a lot!
A question for my own learning, could you briefly explain the logic behind the formula? What is the purpose behind the use of '--' in the formula? Thanks again! /Jonas --- "Bob Phillips" wrote: No ned to apologise, you were perfectly clear in your intent even if you got the syntax wrong. The confusion was caused elsewhere, not by you. You can't do it with SUMIFS as I stated earlier. Did you try my suggestion? -- --- HTH Bob (there's no email, no snail mail, but somewhere should be gmail in my addy) "Jonas" wrote in message ... Hey guys, thanks for all the help. Sorry about the confusion. Through my example, I was trying to illustrate what I had tried, but is not working. I tried using the MONTH function without parenthesis, in hope that the SUMIFS function would apply it to the range A1:A10. Basically, what I am trying to do is this: For each row in the list; if the date in column A corresponds to the month of April; and if the value in column B corresponds to 'criteria'; sum the values in column D. Hope this makes my intentions more clear. /Jonas "Tyro" wrote: If you are addressing me, I am simply stating that the MONTH function requires a date! As in MONTH(date). Semi-colons and commas are not the issue. The OP posted =SUMIFS(D1:D10;A1:A10;MONTH=4;B1:B10;"criteria") I repeat, where is the date for the month function to evaluate?????? Tyro "Bob Phillips" wrote in message ... Who are you arguing with, me, the OP, or ryguy7272? You picked up on the OP (irrelevantly AFAICS), and ryguy7272 picked up on me (incorrectly as it turns out) but he made the mistake of replying to your posting, not mine in the thread. My response was to ryguy7272 pointing out that it was correct to use semi-colons if you have a continental version of Excel, it was not to you, was not appended to yours. You have managed to mix up three posts, completely failed to get the gist of the OPs question (I may have also, but you definitely did), he was trying to show what he had tried but failed to get working. And semi-colons are not used for commas, they are used as a separator of function arguments. You do not use commas, because on the continent, commas are used as the decimal separator for numbers, so they cannot be used as the argument separator. -- --- HTH Bob (there's no email, no snail mail, but somewhere should be gmail in my addy) "Tyro" wrote in message ... True, but semi-colons are used for commas. To my understanding, they do not replace the need for arguments enclosed in parentheses. MONTH=4 is exactly what is says it is. It is not MONTH(date). =SUMIFS(D1:D10;A1:A10;MONTH=4;B1:B10;"criteria") does not contain parentheses to enclose the date argument to the MONTH function, as far as I can ascertain. Even if the semi-colons were replaced by commas, it is still MONTH=4. MONTH of what? Tyro "Bob Phillips" wrote in message ... No they are meant to contain semi-colons, as did the OPs, because presumably he has a continental Excel. -- --- HTH Bob (there's no email, no snail mail, but somewhere should be gmail in my addy) "ryguy7272" wrote in message ... I think Bob's formulas are supposed to contain commas, not semicolons, as such: =SUMPRODUCT(--(MONTH(A1:A10)=4),--(B1:B10="criteria"),D1:D10) Also, you may consider this: =COUNTIF(A1:A9,"=4")+COUNTIF(B1:B9,"criteria") However, that may not yield the results you are after. Finally, a pivot table would do it for you, but I think you'd have to add a helper column, and you have to use something like the =month() function. Regards, Ryan--- -- RyGuy "Tyro" wrote: MONTH=4? MONTH of what? Did you look in Help for the usage of MONTH? Tyro "Jonas" wrote in message ... Hi. I have a table of entries, structured in the following way: Column A contains dates. Column B contains a data validated list. Column D contains values. I now wish to go through all the rows in the list, and sum the values if 1) the value of the cell in column B matches "criteria", and 2) the date in column A is in a specific month. I tried the following formula to sum over all dates in April, without success: =SUMIFS(D1:D10;A1:A10;MONTH=4;B1:B10;"criteria") I suspect my use of the MONTH function is a bit unorthodox, but can't seem to figure out the proper way to do it. I would greatly appreciate any help! /Jonas |
using sumifs to sum based on month, and criteria
I could, but I would just be repeating myself as I have documented it here
http://www.xldynamic.com/source/xld.SUMPRODUCT.html. -- --- HTH Bob (there's no email, no snail mail, but somewhere should be gmail in my addy) "Jonas" wrote in message ... Yes Bob, it works perfectly - thanks a lot! A question for my own learning, could you briefly explain the logic behind the formula? What is the purpose behind the use of '--' in the formula? Thanks again! /Jonas --- "Bob Phillips" wrote: No ned to apologise, you were perfectly clear in your intent even if you got the syntax wrong. The confusion was caused elsewhere, not by you. You can't do it with SUMIFS as I stated earlier. Did you try my suggestion? -- --- HTH Bob (there's no email, no snail mail, but somewhere should be gmail in my addy) "Jonas" wrote in message ... Hey guys, thanks for all the help. Sorry about the confusion. Through my example, I was trying to illustrate what I had tried, but is not working. I tried using the MONTH function without parenthesis, in hope that the SUMIFS function would apply it to the range A1:A10. Basically, what I am trying to do is this: For each row in the list; if the date in column A corresponds to the month of April; and if the value in column B corresponds to 'criteria'; sum the values in column D. Hope this makes my intentions more clear. /Jonas "Tyro" wrote: If you are addressing me, I am simply stating that the MONTH function requires a date! As in MONTH(date). Semi-colons and commas are not the issue. The OP posted =SUMIFS(D1:D10;A1:A10;MONTH=4;B1:B10;"criteria") I repeat, where is the date for the month function to evaluate?????? Tyro "Bob Phillips" wrote in message ... Who are you arguing with, me, the OP, or ryguy7272? You picked up on the OP (irrelevantly AFAICS), and ryguy7272 picked up on me (incorrectly as it turns out) but he made the mistake of replying to your posting, not mine in the thread. My response was to ryguy7272 pointing out that it was correct to use semi-colons if you have a continental version of Excel, it was not to you, was not appended to yours. You have managed to mix up three posts, completely failed to get the gist of the OPs question (I may have also, but you definitely did), he was trying to show what he had tried but failed to get working. And semi-colons are not used for commas, they are used as a separator of function arguments. You do not use commas, because on the continent, commas are used as the decimal separator for numbers, so they cannot be used as the argument separator. -- --- HTH Bob (there's no email, no snail mail, but somewhere should be gmail in my addy) "Tyro" wrote in message ... True, but semi-colons are used for commas. To my understanding, they do not replace the need for arguments enclosed in parentheses. MONTH=4 is exactly what is says it is. It is not MONTH(date). =SUMIFS(D1:D10;A1:A10;MONTH=4;B1:B10;"criteria") does not contain parentheses to enclose the date argument to the MONTH function, as far as I can ascertain. Even if the semi-colons were replaced by commas, it is still MONTH=4. MONTH of what? Tyro "Bob Phillips" wrote in message ... No they are meant to contain semi-colons, as did the OPs, because presumably he has a continental Excel. -- --- HTH Bob (there's no email, no snail mail, but somewhere should be gmail in my addy) "ryguy7272" wrote in message ... I think Bob's formulas are supposed to contain commas, not semicolons, as such: =SUMPRODUCT(--(MONTH(A1:A10)=4),--(B1:B10="criteria"),D1:D10) Also, you may consider this: =COUNTIF(A1:A9,"=4")+COUNTIF(B1:B9,"criteria") However, that may not yield the results you are after. Finally, a pivot table would do it for you, but I think you'd have to add a helper column, and you have to use something like the =month() function. Regards, Ryan--- -- RyGuy "Tyro" wrote: MONTH=4? MONTH of what? Did you look in Help for the usage of MONTH? Tyro "Jonas" wrote in message ... Hi. I have a table of entries, structured in the following way: Column A contains dates. Column B contains a data validated list. Column D contains values. I now wish to go through all the rows in the list, and sum the values if 1) the value of the cell in column B matches "criteria", and 2) the date in column A is in a specific month. I tried the following formula to sum over all dates in April, without success: =SUMIFS(D1:D10;A1:A10;MONTH=4;B1:B10;"criteria") I suspect my use of the MONTH function is a bit unorthodox, but can't seem to figure out the proper way to do it. I would greatly appreciate any help! /Jonas |
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