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Help me "dissect" this function (Excel 2002 [XP])
=DSUM(Membership,Membership!$C$49,C1:C3)+DSUM(Reve nue,'Revenue
Projects'!$D$2,C1:C3) I'm trying to adapt a budget worksheet from another non-profit for our use. I don't know who the author is and I've had it a couple years, so trying to go that route for help is a non-starter. I don't understand why they have Membership twice; I guess one is for the worksheet and the other is the column header, but I don't get it as $C$49 points to a a column label named "Revenue". and C1:C3 point to 2 blank cells and one with the column label "2002". Somehow, the orginal formula was pulling $10,000 frm this worksheet. I can't figure out how. In the 2nd half of the function I don't have a worksheet named Revenue, but do ahve one named Revenue Projects - but no column lable of Revenue. Anyway $D$2 is a column label called "Monthly Giving" (don't know why I need that in this formula), and C1:C3 are a blank line, column header, and some text. Now the number I CAN pull frm MY formula - $600 - can be found in cell D4. In case it's useful, cell A4 has trhe following text: "Monthly Giving". I can provide much more info on the workbook, but I limited myself to the immediate problem. (P.S. What do some formulas use $ signs in front of the cell column and row ID's and others don't? Couldn't find it in the Help menu.) -- Mike Webb Platte River Whooping Crane Maintenance Trust, Inc. a 501 (c)(3) conservation non-profit organization |
Help me "dissect" this function (Excel 2002 [XP])
I think you will have a much clearer understanding if you hit help in Excel,
and type in DSUM. It not only explains the syntax, but also gives a very good example of how to use inter alia DSUM. As for the last part of your question, the $ sign is used to make a cell reference absolute, as opposed to relative. Iow, if you enter the following formula in B1 - =A1, and you copy it to C1, it becomes =B1. If you copy it to B2, it becomes A2. However, $A1, if copied to C1, will still read =$A1. If you copy this to B2, it will read =$A2. =$A$1 will remain as =$A$1, no matter where you copy it to. A$1, when copied to B1, will read =B$1, but if copied to B2, will read =A$1 "Mike Webb" wrote: =DSUM(Membership,Membership!$C$49,C1:C3)+DSUM(Reve nue,'Revenue Projects'!$D$2,C1:C3) I'm trying to adapt a budget worksheet from another non-profit for our use. I don't know who the author is and I've had it a couple years, so trying to go that route for help is a non-starter. I don't understand why they have Membership twice; I guess one is for the worksheet and the other is the column header, but I don't get it as $C$49 points to a a column label named "Revenue". and C1:C3 point to 2 blank cells and one with the column label "2002". Somehow, the orginal formula was pulling $10,000 frm this worksheet. I can't figure out how. In the 2nd half of the function I don't have a worksheet named Revenue, but do ahve one named Revenue Projects - but no column lable of Revenue. Anyway $D$2 is a column label called "Monthly Giving" (don't know why I need that in this formula), and C1:C3 are a blank line, column header, and some text. Now the number I CAN pull frm MY formula - $600 - can be found in cell D4. In case it's useful, cell A4 has trhe following text: "Monthly Giving". I can provide much more info on the workbook, but I limited myself to the immediate problem. (P.S. What do some formulas use $ signs in front of the cell column and row ID's and others don't? Couldn't find it in the Help menu.) -- Mike Webb Platte River Whooping Crane Maintenance Trust, Inc. a 501 (c)(3) conservation non-profit organization |
Help me "dissect" this function (Excel 2002 [XP])
Thanks for the explanation of the $ sign - it helps a lot.
However, I'm still unsure about DSUM. I just enterred DSUM into Help and got the definition - Database-Field-Criteria. Using this as the "decoder", the 1st "Membership" would be the Database (worksheet), "Membership!$C$49" is the Field, and "C1:C3" is the criteria - correct? If the Field is the column used, then I don't get the "Membership" half. That word is used in only one cell on the worksheet - A1. As I mentioned below, $C$49 refers to a column label named "Revenue" (which is not used on the original worksheet that has the cell with this formula). And the criteria makes no sense when I look at what's in those cells. I tried hitting "Example" in Help for DSUM, but their example: =DSUM(A4:E10,"Profit",A1:F2) The total profit from apple trees with a height between 10 and 16. (75) doesn't help me. Can someone give me a bit more to go on? Mike "kassie" wrote in message ... I think you will have a much clearer understanding if you hit help in Excel, and type in DSUM. It not only explains the syntax, but also gives a very good example of how to use inter alia DSUM. As for the last part of your question, the $ sign is used to make a cell reference absolute, as opposed to relative. Iow, if you enter the following formula in B1 - =A1, and you copy it to C1, it becomes =B1. If you copy it to B2, it becomes A2. However, $A1, if copied to C1, will still read =$A1. If you copy this to B2, it will read =$A2. =$A$1 will remain as =$A$1, no matter where you copy it to. A$1, when copied to B1, will read =B$1, but if copied to B2, will read =A$1 "Mike Webb" wrote: =DSUM(Membership,Membership!$C$49,C1:C3)+DSUM(Reve nue,'Revenue Projects'!$D$2,C1:C3) I'm trying to adapt a budget worksheet from another non-profit for our use. I don't know who the author is and I've had it a couple years, so trying to go that route for help is a non-starter. I don't understand why they have Membership twice; I guess one is for the worksheet and the other is the column header, but I don't get it as $C$49 points to a a column label named "Revenue". and C1:C3 point to 2 blank cells and one with the column label "2002". Somehow, the orginal formula was pulling $10,000 frm this worksheet. I can't figure out how. In the 2nd half of the function I don't have a worksheet named Revenue, but do ahve one named Revenue Projects - but no column lable of Revenue. Anyway $D$2 is a column label called "Monthly Giving" (don't know why I need that in this formula), and C1:C3 are a blank line, column header, and some text. Now the number I CAN pull frm MY formula - $600 - can be found in cell D4. In case it's useful, cell A4 has trhe following text: "Monthly Giving". I can provide much more info on the workbook, but I limited myself to the immediate problem. (P.S. What do some formulas use $ signs in front of the cell column and row ID's and others don't? Couldn't find it in the Help menu.) -- Mike Webb Platte River Whooping Crane Maintenance Trust, Inc. a 501 (c)(3) conservation non-profit organization |
Help me "dissect" this function (Excel 2002 [XP])
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Help me "dissect" this function (Excel 2002 [XP])
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