Forum Discussion
Linking Tabs to Sum
- Jan 09, 2023
That is not so difficult. If you want to work with a pivot table in the future, you will need the formula in column L because the shop information can only be found in the CC. The formula I wrote will also work in any other of your worksheets as long as you have the table CC with the same range CC!$A$3:$R$46 of data. If necessary you have to adapt it.
If you have the data then you need to select the data range and then create the pivot table. Try that out. It is not difficult. I'm sure there are many good documentations on the internet and YouTube on how it works.
You still have to make some settings so that it looks exactly like in my example. But with a little trial and error, you're sure to get it right.
My suggestion would be to solve the working hours with a SUMIFS() function.
=SUM(SUMIFS('All Data'!$G$2:$G$10600,'All Data'!$J$2:$J$10600,OFFSET(CC!$A$3,0,XMATCH($B3,CC!$A$2:$R$2)-1,44),'All Data'!$E$2:$E$10600,C$2))Please check my example critically to see if it fits.
- nattiej101Jan 07, 2023Brass ContributorHello!! This looks like it should work for the totals - is there anyway to breakdown the Sum/Total by the Pay Code and Labor Costs on the All Data tab?
- dscheikeyJan 07, 2023Bronze Contributor
That is certainly possible. It would be best if you prepare a table showing which evaluation you need. An example calculation with correct results that I can compare with would be helpful.
- nattiej101Jan 08, 2023Brass Contributor
I just modified and made a final output tab.... So I need to totals broken out by cost center, date, pay code, and labor costs. I'm just not sure how to make it easier since this is a lot of data. (This is only one month of one location.)
Thanks again for all of your help!