Excel same Formula in different columns-calculate columnwise?

G

Guest

I have an excel sheet, which collects a particular data for different people
and different fields.
It essentially looks like this:
Fields A B C D
aa 1 3 1 2
ab 2 1 1 2
ca 1 2 1 1
dd 1 2 2 2
rd 3 3 1 2
fg 3 4 1 1
ef 4 2 2 3
tf 1 2 2 1
tt 1 2 1 2
sd 2 1 2 2
ss 2 1 2 2
df 1 1 2 2
where the letters in the forst column specify names of persons and A, B, C,
D... specify the field in which the persons have scored the levels(1, 2, 3, 4)

In this sheet, I have 4 more rows at the bottom like this:
Level 1 6
Level 2 3 6
Level 3 2 2
Level 4 1 0

6 in the first row is the number of "Level1"s in A, 3 the no of "level 2"s
in A.
0 at the last is the number of "level 4" in D. and so on....

The question is: I have hundreds of numbers like this in the same sheet. for
all the columns, I cannot go on saying =COUNTIF(B2:B13,1) to find the number
of 1's in field B!
Is there some way to give the formula so that, it calculated the similar
data range in every column and puts the amount in the specified cell?
 
G

Guest

Hi
You should be able to drag the formula across once it's right. It will
automatically increase the column reference for you. To drag the formula
across, use the little + sign in the bottom right-hand corner.

Hope this helps.
Andy.
 
D

Dav

I have answered this on the other post. It it bad practice to post
things twice, as it wastes your time (you have to look in 2 places for
your answers), wastes our time reading unnecessary posts and stops us
reading potentially useful contributions from other contributors. This
means that you may be prevented from getting the best answer

Regards

Dav
 
G

Guest

Thanks Dav, I am new to this forum and thought I'll get a prompt reply by
posting in 2 places, getting noticed by different users. I was in a hurry.
I would follow that here after!
 
G

Guest

Thanks Andy, it helps. and it's very easy too.

Andy said:
Hi
You should be able to drag the formula across once it's right. It will
automatically increase the column reference for you. To drag the formula
across, use the little + sign in the bottom right-hand corner.

Hope this helps.
Andy.
 

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