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For all you Excel guru's, not only do I need an answer, I need to know how to
ask the question. Please bear with me and thank you for your time. I have a spreadsheet with multiple tabs (worksheets?) and I am using the first one as a cover sheet type doohickey. The following pages are set up to track who has done what training by section, then all that comes together on the cover sheet. So imagine if you will about a dozen tabs named for each work section, with a list of names that work in that section and then about thirty columns labeled with the training requirement and whether the person has done it or not. Eezy peezy. It gets complicated when 'they' (the powers that be) want to know the grade the person passed (or failed) by. So next to the column labeled PFT (or Physical Fitness Test) for example is a column asking what class (or grade) the person got; 1st class, 2nd, 3rd, Failed and partial. So in that column there are multiple 'values' I guess they're called. A bunch of 1s and 2s, a few 3s and Fails. Now, on the cover sheet, I have the percentage of how many people ran a PFT, in this case %56.67 of the people have ran a PFT. What I need now is the number of people who got a 1st class, 2nd class and so on. Not a percentage, but an actual number. The old way of doing this would have me go through each tab and count how many 1s I have in that column and then how many 2s, etc. Is it possible for me to put on the cover sheet that I have 105 1s, 52 2s 12 3s, etc? Let me rephrase that. Is there anyway to do this automatically? Ive tried, and please dont think less of me, to understand vlookup, index, match and other formula types but its mostly gibberish to me. Please help. It takes too dern much time to look up this info on over 300 people. Again Thank You. |
#2
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Posted to microsoft.public.excel.newusers
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My thoughts/offering to you ..
Take a look-through these 3 selected samples from my archives, which imo, is of relevance. Samples are in rough order of complexity. 1. Interactive Summary.xls http://savefile.com/files/414328 Interactive Summary: A simple formulas driven model which extracts figs by attribute (selectable via a droplist) from various identically structured source data shts into an easy-to-view summary sheet 2. Exec Summary.xls http://savefile.com/files/1925536 Executive Summary: A formulas driven model which extracts Open status cases for droplist selectable Dept and Year. Source sheets are named by year, eg: 2008 3. Military Leave Tracking Model.xls http://savefile.com/files/1953053 Military Leave Tracking Model: Formulas driven model with facilitated leave application via droplists, auto-leave calendar generation and an auto-summary to output daily mission capability readiness based on minimum manpower required for scheduled missions -- Max Singapore http://savefile.com/projects/236895 Downloads:25,000 Files:300 Subscribers:70 xdemechanik --- "greenusmarine53" wrote: For all you Excel guru's, not only do I need an answer, I need to know how to ask the question. Please bear with me and thank you for your time. I have a spreadsheet with multiple tabs (worksheets?) and I am using the first one as a cover sheet type doohickey. The following pages are set up to track who has done what training by section, then all that comes together on the cover sheet. So imagine if you will about a dozen tabs named for each work section, with a list of names that work in that section and then about thirty columns labeled with the training requirement and whether the person has done it or not. Eezy peezy. It gets complicated when 'they' (the powers that be) want to know the grade the person passed (or failed) by. So next to the column labeled PFT (or Physical Fitness Test) for example is a column asking what class (or grade) the person got; 1st class, 2nd, 3rd, Failed and partial. So in that column there are multiple 'values' I guess they're called. A bunch of 1s and 2s, a few 3s and Fails. Now, on the cover sheet, I have the percentage of how many people ran a PFT, in this case %56.67 of the people have ran a PFT. What I need now is the number of people who got a 1st class, 2nd class and so on. Not a percentage, but an actual number. The old way of doing this would have me go through each tab and count how many 1s I have in that column and then how many 2s, etc. Is it possible for me to put on the cover sheet that I have 105 1s, 52 2s 12 3s, etc? Let me rephrase that. Is there anyway to do this automatically? Ive tried, and please dont think less of me, to understand vlookup, index, match and other formula types but its mostly gibberish to me. Please help. It takes too dern much time to look up this info on over 300 people. Again Thank You. |
#3
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If you find Max's examples too complex, you have the option of performing
your counts in each worksheet using the Countif() function and summing the result of this through to your summary sheet using a 3D sum formula. So, what is a 3D formula, you ask: You will be used to summing In a worksheet - type '=Sum( {select your cell range})', press [Enter] and the answer magically appears. A 3d formula does the same type of thing but extends the formula across multiple worksheets. Unfortunately, the Countif() function will not perform 3D calculations. Breaking the problem into its parts: A) Countif () to find the number of 1's, 2's, 3's etc. Locate a vacant area in your first data worksheet, that you know is also vacant in all other data worksheets. Create Countif() formula to add up your 1's, 2's, 3's, 4's etc. Each formula will look something like: =COUNTIF(B:B,1) In the above: - B:B is the range of cells in which to count - 1 is the value to count in the range If the value to be matched is not a number, you need to write your formula slightly different so Excel knows it is dealing with a string: =COUNTIF(B:B,"=1st") Or, if you store the value in another cell: =COUNTIF(B:B,K1) where K1 is the relevant cell In place of B:B, substitute your own range. For example C2:C100 will restrict the count range to that range of cells. Microsoft's explanation of the function: http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/ex...CH062528311033 Once you understand what the formula is doing, think of a range of cells that are blank in each of your raw data sheets where you can put your formula. Create your formula in one sheet only. Highlight your formula and copy TO THE SAME LOCATION in each summary worksheet. B) Now for the 3D sum: -In your summary sheet, click the cell where you want your first result. -In the formula bar, type "=Sum(" (without the quotes) -Click the tab or the first sheet in the range of sheets that contain the information, then click the relevant cell. - Holding the [Shift] key, click the tab of the last sheet in the range of sheets that contain the information. - Type ")" to complete the formula then press [Enter] Next, assuming you have you in data adjacent cells in all worksheets, copy and paste your new formula across or down the same number of cells. If my explanation causes confusion these references may help: http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/ex...CH010036991033 http://www.bettersolutions.com/excel...N620422111.htm -- Steve "Max" wrote in message ... My thoughts/offering to you .. Take a look-through these 3 selected samples from my archives, which imo, is of relevance. Samples are in rough order of complexity. 1. Interactive Summary.xls http://savefile.com/files/414328 Interactive Summary: A simple formulas driven model which extracts figs by attribute (selectable via a droplist) from various identically structured source data shts into an easy-to-view summary sheet 2. Exec Summary.xls http://savefile.com/files/1925536 Executive Summary: A formulas driven model which extracts Open status cases for droplist selectable Dept and Year. Source sheets are named by year, eg: 2008 3. Military Leave Tracking Model.xls http://savefile.com/files/1953053 Military Leave Tracking Model: Formulas driven model with facilitated leave application via droplists, auto-leave calendar generation and an auto-summary to output daily mission capability readiness based on minimum manpower required for scheduled missions -- Max Singapore http://savefile.com/projects/236895 Downloads:25,000 Files:300 Subscribers:70 xdemechanik --- "greenusmarine53" wrote: For all you Excel guru's, not only do I need an answer, I need to know how to ask the question. Please bear with me and thank you for your time. I have a spreadsheet with multiple tabs (worksheets?) and I am using the first one as a cover sheet type doohickey. The following pages are set up to track who has done what training by section, then all that comes together on the cover sheet. So imagine if you will about a dozen tabs named for each work section, with a list of names that work in that section and then about thirty columns labeled with the training requirement and whether the person has done it or not. Eezy peezy. It gets complicated when 'they' (the powers that be) want to know the grade the person passed (or failed) by. So next to the column labeled PFT (or Physical Fitness Test) for example is a column asking what class (or grade) the person got; 1st class, 2nd, 3rd, Failed and partial. So in that column there are multiple 'values' I guess they're called. A bunch of 1s and 2s, a few 3s and Fails. Now, on the cover sheet, I have the percentage of how many people ran a PFT, in this case %56.67 of the people have ran a PFT. What I need now is the number of people who got a 1st class, 2nd class and so on. Not a percentage, but an actual number. The old way of doing this would have me go through each tab and count how many 1s I have in that column and then how many 2s, etc. Is it possible for me to put on the cover sheet that I have 105 1s, 52 2s 12 3s, etc? Let me rephrase that. Is there anyway to do this automatically? Ive tried, and please dont think less of me, to understand vlookup, index, match and other formula types but its mostly gibberish to me. Please help. It takes too dern much time to look up this info on over 300 people. Again Thank You. |
#4
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It is critical to have your sheets for a 3D formula arranged together with
no stray sheets in the middle. For example, if your sheets were arranged: Sheet1, Sheet2, Sheet3, Sheet4, Sheet5, Sheet6 you should not place a summary sheet or another sheet relating to something else in the middle. Oh! I omitted an example of a 3D sum: =SUM(Sheet2:Sheet6!A1) The above is saying sum the values in cell A1 in the range of sheets Sheet2 to Sheet6, inclusive. For a workbook with worksheets intact and in order this will sum the values in cell A1 in sheets Sheet2, Sheet3, Sheet4, Sheet5, Sheet6. If worksheets are not in order, it will sum only the sheets between Sheet2 to Sheet6, inclusive. So, for example, if you move Sheet4 outside the range, Excel will adjust Sheet4 outside its calculation. If you move a new sheet within the range of sheets, Excel will adjust, adding relevant values in the new sheet. -- Steve "AltaEgo" <Somewhere@NotHere wrote in message ... If you find Max's examples too complex, you have the option of performing your counts in each worksheet using the Countif() function and summing the result of this through to your summary sheet using a 3D sum formula. So, what is a 3D formula, you ask: You will be used to summing In a worksheet - type '=Sum( {select your cell range})', press [Enter] and the answer magically appears. A 3d formula does the same type of thing but extends the formula across multiple worksheets. Unfortunately, the Countif() function will not perform 3D calculations. Breaking the problem into its parts: A) Countif () to find the number of 1's, 2's, 3's etc. Locate a vacant area in your first data worksheet, that you know is also vacant in all other data worksheets. Create Countif() formula to add up your 1's, 2's, 3's, 4's etc. Each formula will look something like: =COUNTIF(B:B,1) In the above: - B:B is the range of cells in which to count - 1 is the value to count in the range If the value to be matched is not a number, you need to write your formula slightly different so Excel knows it is dealing with a string: =COUNTIF(B:B,"=1st") Or, if you store the value in another cell: =COUNTIF(B:B,K1) where K1 is the relevant cell In place of B:B, substitute your own range. For example C2:C100 will restrict the count range to that range of cells. Microsoft's explanation of the function: http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/ex...CH062528311033 Once you understand what the formula is doing, think of a range of cells that are blank in each of your raw data sheets where you can put your formula. Create your formula in one sheet only. Highlight your formula and copy TO THE SAME LOCATION in each summary worksheet. B) Now for the 3D sum: -In your summary sheet, click the cell where you want your first result. -In the formula bar, type "=Sum(" (without the quotes) -Click the tab or the first sheet in the range of sheets that contain the information, then click the relevant cell. - Holding the [Shift] key, click the tab of the last sheet in the range of sheets that contain the information. - Type ")" to complete the formula then press [Enter] Next, assuming you have you in data adjacent cells in all worksheets, copy and paste your new formula across or down the same number of cells. If my explanation causes confusion these references may help: http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/ex...CH010036991033 http://www.bettersolutions.com/excel...N620422111.htm -- Steve "Max" wrote in message ... My thoughts/offering to you .. Take a look-through these 3 selected samples from my archives, which imo, is of relevance. Samples are in rough order of complexity. 1. Interactive Summary.xls http://savefile.com/files/414328 Interactive Summary: A simple formulas driven model which extracts figs by attribute (selectable via a droplist) from various identically structured source data shts into an easy-to-view summary sheet 2. Exec Summary.xls http://savefile.com/files/1925536 Executive Summary: A formulas driven model which extracts Open status cases for droplist selectable Dept and Year. Source sheets are named by year, eg: 2008 3. Military Leave Tracking Model.xls http://savefile.com/files/1953053 Military Leave Tracking Model: Formulas driven model with facilitated leave application via droplists, auto-leave calendar generation and an auto-summary to output daily mission capability readiness based on minimum manpower required for scheduled missions -- Max Singapore http://savefile.com/projects/236895 Downloads:25,000 Files:300 Subscribers:70 xdemechanik --- "greenusmarine53" wrote: For all you Excel guru's, not only do I need an answer, I need to know how to ask the question. Please bear with me and thank you for your time. I have a spreadsheet with multiple tabs (worksheets?) and I am using the first one as a cover sheet type doohickey. The following pages are set up to track who has done what training by section, then all that comes together on the cover sheet. So imagine if you will about a dozen tabs named for each work section, with a list of names that work in that section and then about thirty columns labeled with the training requirement and whether the person has done it or not. Eezy peezy. It gets complicated when 'they' (the powers that be) want to know the grade the person passed (or failed) by. So next to the column labeled PFT (or Physical Fitness Test) for example is a column asking what class (or grade) the person got; 1st class, 2nd, 3rd, Failed and partial. So in that column there are multiple 'values' I guess they're called. A bunch of 1s and 2s, a few 3s and Fails. Now, on the cover sheet, I have the percentage of how many people ran a PFT, in this case %56.67 of the people have ran a PFT. What I need now is the number of people who got a 1st class, 2nd class and so on. Not a percentage, but an actual number. The old way of doing this would have me go through each tab and count how many 1s I have in that column and then how many 2s, etc. Is it possible for me to put on the cover sheet that I have 105 1s, 52 2s 12 3s, etc? Let me rephrase that. Is there anyway to do this automatically? Ive tried, and please dont think less of me, to understand vlookup, index, match and other formula types but its mostly gibberish to me. Please help. It takes too dern much time to look up this info on over 300 people. Again Thank You. |
#5
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That did it! Thank you gentlemen. So very much.
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