Will a Nested IF/SUMIF function instead of VBA?

G

Guest

Hello again Excel Wizards!

Last year, I worked pretty hard on creating VBA to split my data and
organize it so that it was 1) uniform and 2) organized for the process of
picking at it just to get the sum of numbers in one column... So now I'm
wondering if that was overkill and if it could be done with an IF function,
but all I keep thinking about is that it would be too long to type into a
cell. Sorry for the length, but here's what I'm going for:

Currently, I'm extracting data from a third-party program into Excel. The
columns, however are not always in the same place which is why I had chosen
to write a VBA macro to extract those select few columns and place them into
the same order on another sheet for the purpose of searching through it and
summing up the data if it meets my criteria. Here's a sample of what it (the
seperate file) looks like (I have used commas to seperate fields as spacing
could be a problem on the screen):

EMPLOYEE,HEAD_COUNT,LOCATION_CODE,DIVISION_CODE,STATUS,etc...
Ronny,1.0,99990001,99,Temp,...
Jennifer,1.0,98990001,98,Temp,...
Roger,1.0,99990001,99,Perm,...

Here's what I'd like to do in another Excel file:

I want an IF function (SUM IF maybe, but not VBA/Macro code) that will first
check the STATUS column (in the data file) for Temp or Perm, and if it's Perm
I would like it to tally up the numbers in the HEAD_COUNT field if the first
four numbers in the LOCATION_CODE matches my criteria. This would basically
give me a total number (I have to use a SUM of the HEAD_COUNT because it
could be a 0.5) for a location (signified by the first two digits of the
LOCATION_CODE) if and only if they are a Perm employee.

The macro (that I'm using now) splits the data by Location, removed all Temp
employee records, and sums up the HEAD_COUNT for each location into a
subtotal or sorts. It also names/defines each subtotal with the name of
"LocationXXXX" where "XXXX" is the 4 digit location number.

Then in another document (my totals document), I have calls to the already
split-up/organized files for the subtotal numbers using the named/defined
fields.

I hope this all makes sense! As I said, if there's no way to perform all of
these things within an IF or SUMIF function, it's no big deal since I have a
working Macro.

Thank you!

Ronny
 
P

Per Erik Midtrød

Hello.

I am not quite sure if I understood the last part correct, but if you
only need a formula to sum head_count this one could be used:
=SUM((E2:E4="Perm")*(LEFT(C2:C4;4)="9999"))

Replace "9999" with the cells that hold your criteria.
It is an array formula so you have to press Ctrl+Shift+enter when you
edit it.

I presumed that Status is in column E, location in C and head_count in
B

Per Erik
 
A

Arvi Laanemets

Hi

With table on sheet Data (row 1 are headers), on fly:
=SUMPRODUCT(--(Status="Perm"),--(LEFT(Location,2)*1=Criteria),Head)
where
Status - a named range defined as
INDEX(DataTable,,MATCH("STATUS",DataHead,0))
Location - a named range defined as
INDEX(DataTable,,MATCH("LOCATION_CODE",DataHead,0))
Head - a named range defined as
INDEX(DataTable,,MATCH("HEAD_COUNT",DataHead,0))
, where
DataTable - a named range defined as
=OFFSET(Data!$A$1,1,,COUNTA(Data!$A:$A)-1,COUNTA(DataHead))
DataHead - a named range defined as
=OFFSET(Data!$A$1,,,1,COUNTA(Data!$1:$1)-1)


Arvi Laanemets
 
G

Guest

you should be able to use something like this

=SUMPRODUCT(--(E2:E4="Perm"),--(LEFT(C2:C4,4)="9999"),B2:B4)

You will need to use the SUMPRODUCT function because you have more than one
qualifier (SUMIF can only have one). The first two are the qualifiers and
produce the following arrays.
{0,0,1}
{1,0,1}
The last one is simply the headcount as an array and produces this array
{1,1,1}
The result are each item in the arrays mulitplied together and summed (ie
0*1*1+0*0*1+1*1*1). You should be able to figure something out from this.
Also, you didn't say what your criteria was for the location code, so I made
one up.
 
R

Ron Rosenfeld

Hello again Excel Wizards!

Last year, I worked pretty hard on creating VBA to split my data and
organize it so that it was 1) uniform and 2) organized for the process of
picking at it just to get the sum of numbers in one column... So now I'm
wondering if that was overkill and if it could be done with an IF function,
but all I keep thinking about is that it would be too long to type into a
cell. Sorry for the length, but here's what I'm going for:

Currently, I'm extracting data from a third-party program into Excel. The
columns, however are not always in the same place which is why I had chosen
to write a VBA macro to extract those select few columns and place them into
the same order on another sheet for the purpose of searching through it and
summing up the data if it meets my criteria. Here's a sample of what it (the
seperate file) looks like (I have used commas to seperate fields as spacing
could be a problem on the screen):

EMPLOYEE,HEAD_COUNT,LOCATION_CODE,DIVISION_CODE,STATUS,etc...
Ronny,1.0,99990001,99,Temp,...
Jennifer,1.0,98990001,98,Temp,...
Roger,1.0,99990001,99,Perm,...

Here's what I'd like to do in another Excel file:

I want an IF function (SUM IF maybe, but not VBA/Macro code) that will first
check the STATUS column (in the data file) for Temp or Perm, and if it's Perm
I would like it to tally up the numbers in the HEAD_COUNT field if the first
four numbers in the LOCATION_CODE matches my criteria. This would basically
give me a total number (I have to use a SUM of the HEAD_COUNT because it
could be a 0.5) for a location (signified by the first two digits of the
LOCATION_CODE) if and only if they are a Perm employee.

The macro (that I'm using now) splits the data by Location, removed all Temp
employee records, and sums up the HEAD_COUNT for each location into a
subtotal or sorts. It also names/defines each subtotal with the name of
"LocationXXXX" where "XXXX" is the 4 digit location number.

Then in another document (my totals document), I have calls to the already
split-up/organized files for the subtotal numbers using the named/defined
fields.

I hope this all makes sense! As I said, if there's no way to perform all of
these things within an IF or SUMIF function, it's no big deal since I have a
working Macro.

Thank you!

Ronny

It sounds like SUMPRODUCT might do what you describe.

e.g. something like:

=SUMPRODUCT((STATUS="Perm")*(--LEFT(LOCATION_CODE,4)=9999)*HEAD_COUNT)

Note that the LEFT worksheet function returns a string; the preceding
double-unary converts that value into a number. That should be more user
friendly if you replace 9999 with a cell reference.


--ron
 
G

Guest

Thank you to all for the assistance!

Erik - The problem with that formula is that the columns are never always
in the same position. This formula would be perfect except for that reason
alone. :(
 

Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments. After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.

Ask a Question

Similar Threads


Top