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Nested Limitations
I have a excel worksheet that I want to do the following:
If A1 has OFC and B1 has 1992 then C1 returns a value of 20.33 However I'm trying to create the formula that would have a 82 different outcomes, because a officer with a 1965 seniority date makes $24.50 sgt with a 1965 seniority date makes $26.75 officer with a 1966 seniority date make $24.00 sgt with a 1966 seniority date makes $26.40 etc... I ran across the following link that deals with getting around the nested limitations, but I don't know what they are talking about when they say create a named formula? what is the best way to set this type of data up, so the user can indicate they are a officer or sgt in 1 cell, and input their seniority year in another cell and have it pull the wage off a list that is 3 colums filled with ColA ColB ColC Row1 OFC 1965 24.50 Row2 SGT 1965 26.75 Row3 OFC 1966 24.00 Row4 SGT 1966 $26.40 these type of data would continue for officers and sgt from 1965 thru 2005. I really don't know VB code, and don't seem to be able to make a LOOKUP or VLOOKUP work with my data. How should I approach this. TIA, _Bigred |
Nested Limitations
One way ..
Assuming source data is within A1:C100, Inputs for rank & seniority will be made: In E1: SGT (say) In E2: 1965 (say) Put in the formula bar for E3, then array-enter by pressing CTRL+SHIFT+ENTER (instead of just pressing ENTER): =IF(OR(TRIM(E1)="",E2=""),"", INDEX(C1:C100,MATCH(1,(A1:A100=TRIM(E1))*(B1:B100= E2),0))) E3 will return the wages from col C corresponding to the inputs in E1:E2 -- Max Singapore http://savefile.com/projects/236895 xdemechanik --- "_Bigred" m wrote in message ... I have a excel worksheet that I want to do the following: If A1 has OFC and B1 has 1992 then C1 returns a value of 20.33 However I'm trying to create the formula that would have a 82 different outcomes, because a officer with a 1965 seniority date makes $24.50 sgt with a 1965 seniority date makes $26.75 officer with a 1966 seniority date make $24.00 sgt with a 1966 seniority date makes $26.40 etc... I ran across the following link that deals with getting around the nested limitations, but I don't know what they are talking about when they say create a named formula? what is the best way to set this type of data up, so the user can indicate they are a officer or sgt in 1 cell, and input their seniority year in another cell and have it pull the wage off a list that is 3 colums filled with ColA ColB ColC Row1 OFC 1965 24.50 Row2 SGT 1965 26.75 Row3 OFC 1966 24.00 Row4 SGT 1966 $26.40 these type of data would continue for officers and sgt from 1965 thru 2005. I really don't know VB code, and don't seem to be able to make a LOOKUP or VLOOKUP work with my data. How should I approach this. TIA, _Bigred |
Nested Limitations
Hi!
Try this: This table is on Sheet2 A1:C4: ColA ColB ColC Row1 OFC 1965 24.50 Row2 SGT 1965 26.75 Row3 OFC 1966 24.00 Row4 SGT 1966 $26.40 On Sheet1: A1 = OFC B1 = 1966 C1 = formula: =SUMPRODUCT(--(Sheet2!A1:A4=A1),--(Sheet2!B1:B4=B1),Sheet2!C1:C4) Biff "_Bigred" m wrote in message ... I have a excel worksheet that I want to do the following: If A1 has OFC and B1 has 1992 then C1 returns a value of 20.33 However I'm trying to create the formula that would have a 82 different outcomes, because a officer with a 1965 seniority date makes $24.50 sgt with a 1965 seniority date makes $26.75 officer with a 1966 seniority date make $24.00 sgt with a 1966 seniority date makes $26.40 etc... I ran across the following link that deals with getting around the nested limitations, but I don't know what they are talking about when they say create a named formula? what is the best way to set this type of data up, so the user can indicate they are a officer or sgt in 1 cell, and input their seniority year in another cell and have it pull the wage off a list that is 3 colums filled with ColA ColB ColC Row1 OFC 1965 24.50 Row2 SGT 1965 26.75 Row3 OFC 1966 24.00 Row4 SGT 1966 $26.40 these type of data would continue for officers and sgt from 1965 thru 2005. I really don't know VB code, and don't seem to be able to make a LOOKUP or VLOOKUP work with my data. How should I approach this. TIA, _Bigred |
Nested Limitations
And here is even a third approach,
isn't Excel wonderful to have so many options available :) Move Column C to Column D C1 = A1&B1 and copy this down to all the rest Then lets assume; E1 = Work Position (OFF or SGT) and E2 = Year Then E3 = VLOOKUP(E1&E2,$C$1:$D$82,2,FALSE) George _Bigred wrote: I have a excel worksheet that I want to do the following: If A1 has OFC and B1 has 1992 then C1 returns a value of 20.33 However I'm trying to create the formula that would have a 82 different outcomes, because a officer with a 1965 seniority date makes $24.50 sgt with a 1965 seniority date makes $26.75 officer with a 1966 seniority date make $24.00 sgt with a 1966 seniority date makes $26.40 etc... I ran across the following link that deals with getting around the nested limitations, but I don't know what they are talking about when they say create a named formula? what is the best way to set this type of data up, so the user can indicate they are a officer or sgt in 1 cell, and input their seniority year in another cell and have it pull the wage off a list that is 3 colums filled with ColA ColB ColC Row1 OFC 1965 24.50 Row2 SGT 1965 26.75 Row3 OFC 1966 24.00 Row4 SGT 1966 $26.40 these type of data would continue for officers and sgt from 1965 thru 2005. I really don't know VB code, and don't seem to be able to make a LOOKUP or VLOOKUP work with my data. How should I approach this. TIA, _Bigred |
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