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Earlier I asked the below questions and got the below response. I'm just now
realizing that the solution written below only worked for those items in the range that were made up of 3 numbers. However, it did not work for the codes that were made up of 3 letters. So for instance, it was able to dispay a correct West or East designation if I were looking for the code "500". However, if the formula was looking in the range for the code "ABC" and it was actually in that range, I still received a false designation (i.e. it returned a 0 value) which I had designated to desplay the string "East". Any thoughts on how to make the formula work with both 3 character codes that contain both numbers and letters or a mixture of the two? Thanks for your help, Jimmy "Ron Coderre" wrote: Try this: =IF(COUNTIF(ccode,B3),"West","East") Is that something you can work with? Post back if you have more questions. Regards, Ron Microsoft MVP - Excel "Jimmy" wrote in message ... Hello, I'm trying to determine the best way to return a value or string using an if-then statement. The current formula I have looks like this: =IF(B3=ccode,"West","East") So basically, if whatever is in the cell B3 (let's say its "ABC") is also in the range named "ccode", then it returns the string "West". However, I know the syntax of this formula is incorrect because I receive a "#Name?" error. Any thoughts? |
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