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Okay, so I've managed, with the help of those here, to make a pretty
impressive spreadsheet. But I ran into an interesting problem and maybe you guys can help me understand it. Just so you know, I've figured out another way to get my answer though I'm not 100% sure it's the correct answer, this isnt a Help Me Please!!! question. Just a hmmm, thats weird question. I have a list of 35 annual training requirements. The title of each requirement has its own column. The very first column has a list of about 230 names and each row should have the date in which that person completed the requirement. Well, not every person has every requirement so I need a percentage of how many people have completed any given requirement, by section and total. I did this by =COUNTA(H3:H21) at the bottom of each column and then below that = H22/ 19 as an example. 19 names divided by how many dates I have in that column, or visa versa. Somethings divided by something; Im too tired to think. Okay, because I have 11 different work sections, I have 11 different worksheets, each one with 35 columns for the requirements. Now it used to be that I had all the names together in one long list, but I figured it would be easier to separate them by work section. Boy was I wrong! But its been fun learning all this so its no biggy. Anyway, I have 11 different Operational Risk Management (ORM) columns, each with its own percentage of whos completed the training. But I also needed to know a total percentage. Each of those columns will tell me the percentage for that section, just for those 7 to 20 people, depending on the section. But I also need to know what that percentage is for everyone combined. Now I thought that I could use this fancy function, =SUM((ACAD!AY7+ADMIN!AY23+'S-3 OPS'!AY14+FACM!AY29+MESS!AY30+'S-4 LOGS'!AY10+MT!AY21+SUPP!AY23+FS!AY43+COMM!AY16+UTG !AY54)/ 11) Well the AY is the column for ORM, the numbers are different because the number of people are different for each section. Now heres the important thing to remember, AY7, AY23, AY14 and so on, those correspond to the row that tallies the percentage for each section. Youll notice that I divide all that by 11, which gives the total for everyone. Well, you have your answer, you might say. BUT When I went back and did it manually by numbers alone, in other words, just to check the math, I counted all of the people who completed the requirement and then divided that by 230 and I got a different number, a different percentage. Thats what this is all about. Why am I getting a different number? Whatever the answer, I decided I trusted the numbers alone approach more and redid all my equations or whatever theyre called. But I was wondering if a math genius here might tell why the answers are different. My thought was that the percentages by section were conflicting because each section has a different number of people, if that makes any sense. The odd thing is, there is only a few points difference between the two different answers, in some cases about .05 and at most 6. I know that this is a bit wordy but I wanted to paint a clear picture AND I know that this is more of a math question and has less to do with Excel. But, in my defense, it started because of Excel, so there. Thank you much for your time. Hopefully youll consider this a break from the normal questions. |
#2
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Give us those differences again, in same format. You said ".05 and 6" did
you mean that, or should the 6 have perhaps been .06?? If that's the case it may just be a situation where Excel's internal calculations are a bit off due to the inability of a binary machine to exactly represent decimal numbers in every case. Sometimes adding what appear to be the same group of numbers in a column and checking that against the sum of those columns by adding them as a row actually comes up with 2 slightly different numbers. Here's a kind of example. In cells A1:A3 put the formula =1/3 each one will display as 0.333333. In A4 put =SUM(A1:A3) It will most likely display 1 which is what you think it should be seeing as how you know how you got the 0.333333 in A1:A3. But then in another cell put = .333333+.333333+.333333 and the result will be 0.999999, not 1. So even though it looks like you're adding the same values, internally to Excel, you aren't. So if your differences are only like .05 or .06, then I wouldn't give it a second thought - close enough for government work! (JLatham, Excel MVP ... and MSgt, USAF (Ret)) - Keep up the good work! "greenusmarine53" wrote: Okay, so I've managed, with the help of those here, to make a pretty impressive spreadsheet. But I ran into an interesting problem and maybe you guys can help me understand it. Just so you know, I've figured out another way to get my answer though I'm not 100% sure it's the correct answer, this isnt a Help Me Please!!! question. Just a hmmm, thats weird question. I have a list of 35 annual training requirements. The title of each requirement has its own column. The very first column has a list of about 230 names and each row should have the date in which that person completed the requirement. Well, not every person has every requirement so I need a percentage of how many people have completed any given requirement, by section and total. I did this by =COUNTA(H3:H21) at the bottom of each column and then below that = H22/ 19 as an example. 19 names divided by how many dates I have in that column, or visa versa. Somethings divided by something; Im too tired to think. Okay, because I have 11 different work sections, I have 11 different worksheets, each one with 35 columns for the requirements. Now it used to be that I had all the names together in one long list, but I figured it would be easier to separate them by work section. Boy was I wrong! But its been fun learning all this so its no biggy. Anyway, I have 11 different Operational Risk Management (ORM) columns, each with its own percentage of whos completed the training. But I also needed to know a total percentage. Each of those columns will tell me the percentage for that section, just for those 7 to 20 people, depending on the section. But I also need to know what that percentage is for everyone combined. Now I thought that I could use this fancy function, =SUM((ACAD!AY7+ADMIN!AY23+'S-3 OPS'!AY14+FACM!AY29+MESS!AY30+'S-4 LOGS'!AY10+MT!AY21+SUPP!AY23+FS!AY43+COMM!AY16+UTG !AY54)/ 11) Well the AY is the column for ORM, the numbers are different because the number of people are different for each section. Now heres the important thing to remember, AY7, AY23, AY14 and so on, those correspond to the row that tallies the percentage for each section. Youll notice that I divide all that by 11, which gives the total for everyone. Well, you have your answer, you might say. BUT When I went back and did it manually by numbers alone, in other words, just to check the math, I counted all of the people who completed the requirement and then divided that by 230 and I got a different number, a different percentage. Thats what this is all about. Why am I getting a different number? Whatever the answer, I decided I trusted the numbers alone approach more and redid all my equations or whatever theyre called. But I was wondering if a math genius here might tell why the answers are different. My thought was that the percentages by section were conflicting because each section has a different number of people, if that makes any sense. The odd thing is, there is only a few points difference between the two different answers, in some cases about .05 and at most 6. I know that this is a bit wordy but I wanted to paint a clear picture AND I know that this is more of a math question and has less to do with Excel. But, in my defense, it started because of Excel, so there. Thank you much for your time. Hopefully youll consider this a break from the normal questions. |
#3
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"greenusmarine53" wrote:
Anyway, I have 11 different Operational Risk Management (ORM) columns, each with its own percentage of whos completed the training. But I also needed to know a total percentage. [....] Now I thought that I could use this fancy function, =SUM((ACAD!AY7+ADMIN!AY23+'S-3 OPS'!AY14+FACM!AY29+MESS!AY30+'S-4 LOGS'!AY10+MT!AY21+SUPP!AY23+FS!AY43+COMM!AY16+UTG !AY54)/ 11) [....] When I went back and did it manually by numbers alone, in other words, just to check the math, I counted all of the people who completed the requirement and then divided that by 230 and I got a different number, a different percentage. Thats what this is all about. Why am I getting a different number? If I understand things correctly, I believe you have committed a mathematical error in your Excel formulation. Permit me to abstact your problem somewhat. I hope this will clarify things. Please let me know. For each of the 11 work sections, you have Yn names, Xn of which have completed the ORM requirement. So the percentage for each work section is X1/Y1, X2/Y2,..., X11/Y11. The correct total percentage is: (X1+X2+...+X11) / (Y1+Y2+...+Y11). That is what you calculated manually. But your Excel formula is computing (X1/Y1 + X2/Y2 + ... + X11/Y11) / 11. Those two formulas are equivalent when all Yn are the same. But they are not the same when some Yn are different, which you said is the case. Consider this hypothetical example. One employee in each work section completes the requirement; so all Xn are 1. Consider two cases: Case 1: The number of employees in each work section is 2. So 50% of the employees in each work section completed the requirement. Your formula would add 50% 11 times (11*50%), then divide by 11; the result is 50%. And indeed 11 out of 22 employees completed the requirement; a total of 50%. Case 2: The number of employees is 1 in work section 1, 2 in section 2, 3 in section, etc up to 11 in section 11. So the individual percentages are 1/1, 1/2, 1/3, 1/4, 1/5, 1/6, 1/7, 1/8, 1/9, 1/10 and 1/11. Your formula would add all those -- about 3.019877 -- and divide by 11; the result is about 27.45%. But the actual total percentage is 11 divided by 66 (1+2+...+11); the result is about 16.67%. ----- original message ----- "greenusmarine53" wrote in message ... Okay, so I've managed, with the help of those here, to make a pretty impressive spreadsheet. But I ran into an interesting problem and maybe you guys can help me understand it. Just so you know, I've figured out another way to get my answer though I'm not 100% sure it's the correct answer, this isnt a Help Me Please!!! question. Just a hmmm, thats weird question. I have a list of 35 annual training requirements. The title of each requirement has its own column. The very first column has a list of about 230 names and each row should have the date in which that person completed the requirement. Well, not every person has every requirement so I need a percentage of how many people have completed any given requirement, by section and total. I did this by =COUNTA(H3:H21) at the bottom of each column and then below that = H22/ 19 as an example. 19 names divided by how many dates I have in that column, or visa versa. Somethings divided by something; Im too tired to think. Okay, because I have 11 different work sections, I have 11 different worksheets, each one with 35 columns for the requirements. Now it used to be that I had all the names together in one long list, but I figured it would be easier to separate them by work section. Boy was I wrong! But its been fun learning all this so its no biggy. Anyway, I have 11 different Operational Risk Management (ORM) columns, each with its own percentage of whos completed the training. But I also needed to know a total percentage. Each of those columns will tell me the percentage for that section, just for those 7 to 20 people, depending on the section. But I also need to know what that percentage is for everyone combined. Now I thought that I could use this fancy function, =SUM((ACAD!AY7+ADMIN!AY23+'S-3 OPS'!AY14+FACM!AY29+MESS!AY30+'S-4 LOGS'!AY10+MT!AY21+SUPP!AY23+FS!AY43+COMM!AY16+UTG !AY54)/ 11) Well the AY is the column for ORM, the numbers are different because the number of people are different for each section. Now heres the important thing to remember, AY7, AY23, AY14 and so on, those correspond to the row that tallies the percentage for each section. Youll notice that I divide all that by 11, which gives the total for everyone. Well, you have your answer, you might say. BUT When I went back and did it manually by numbers alone, in other words, just to check the math, I counted all of the people who completed the requirement and then divided that by 230 and I got a different number, a different percentage. Thats what this is all about. Why am I getting a different number? Whatever the answer, I decided I trusted the numbers alone approach more and redid all my equations or whatever theyre called. But I was wondering if a math genius here might tell why the answers are different. My thought was that the percentages by section were conflicting because each section has a different number of people, if that makes any sense. The odd thing is, there is only a few points difference between the two different answers, in some cases about .05 and at most 6. I know that this is a bit wordy but I wanted to paint a clear picture AND I know that this is more of a math question and has less to do with Excel. But, in my defense, it started because of Excel, so there. Thank you much for your time. Hopefully youll consider this a break from the normal questions. |
#4
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To the first, the differences were between .05% and 6%.
To both, thank you. I figured it had something to do with the way I was dividing the numbers. And thank you for confirming that I was right to go with a simple numbers solution rather than messing with the percentages. |
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