Sep 16 2021 07:31 AM
I am not an in depth excel user. I am working with one excel file with multiple workbooks.
Plowing through this, but working against a deadline :(
Sep 16 2021 08:21 AM
Is it at all possible for you to post a copy of your actual workbook? It is very (VERY) difficult to respond to a verbal description such as yours in any way that one could feel confident about, especially given your own admitted lack of in depth experience with whatever one might offer.
So let me ask again, could you post a copy of the actual workbook (not just an image; the actual workbook)?
IF the actual workbook contains proprietary or confidential information (or private personal names and contact info), then a facsimile with false names, just to give us here some better sense first hand of the relationships your words have described, how the data on the various sheets are arrayed, etc.
Sep 16 2021 08:50 AM
@mathetes just did...
I was trying to simplify in my description, but...
For example: in tab CINDY i will have a code in Column C. If that Code = 1 (or whatever), i want to add up the data included in Column B - Hours. This should happen for each line where Code = 1.
Then that data/formula should be referenced/displayed in workbook SUMMARY. IDC where, i havent set that up yet.
Thank-you for bothering to decrypt my message! Greatly appreciated!
Sep 16 2021 09:31 AM
OK, here's a start. I've modified the sheets "CIndy" and "Allison" to make them Excel Tables, with the names "Cindy" and "Allison". Doing this makes it possible for you to continue to add rows to either of them and have the formulas take into account added rows.
I've also assumed that some hours will be coded "1" as you suggest, but that others might be coded 2 or 3, etc., so I've covered that possible scenario as well.
Then in the Summary sheet, the set up is as seen below, and the formula for cell D5 is visible in the formula bar, that being: =SUMIF(Cindy[CODE],D$3,Cindy[HOURS])
Sep 19 2021 11:28 AM
SolutionSep 19 2021 01:58 PM
Sep 19 2021 01:59 PM
Sep 19 2021 02:38 PM
D$4. is a reference to a cell toward the top of the summary sheet. The dollar sign keeps the reference to row 4 even if the column changes; it's called an "absolute reference". As I said in my earlier post, I was assuming that you'd have codes OTHER THAN 1, so created a way for those to be handled; hence the codes 2----
That said, the formulas' references to Cindy and so forth are references to a table name; some of the new ones that you created are called Table5, Table8, and so forth.
If I were doing this myself, unless there were compelling reason to have separate sheets for each source, I'd make them all a single database and have the summary still able to separate them different entities out by selection criteria. Having separate sheets--although cleaner for human beings to look at--actually gets in the way of a clean and simple Excel formula, as you're discovering. You need to write a different formula for each entity, rather than using one formula and referring to the names.....
If you're able to put all those billing hours into one table, regardless of source--just adding a column to identify whether it's Cindy or Allison or.....--let me know and I can show you that.
Sep 19 2021 02:46 PM
Do a little reading here to help understand the terms I used in that last message
https://exceljet.net/excel-tables
https://exceljet.net/glossary/named-range
https://exceljet.net/glossary/mixed-reference
Sep 19 2021 04:50 PM
Jan 23 2022 04:11 PM
Me again. thank-you for your help in sept. I've been pretty lame on this by just using it, but recently had to expand it....so i read your references ....i get it. I cant figure out now, why i'm getting errors. Getting the right number, but an error flag.
If you can, see attachment. Specifically, on the SUMMARY tab : Cells J12 and and K12. When i added new tables, created names...i can only think in setting up the table i had to do something to designate the columns for formulas......idk....input appreciated.
Jan 24 2022 06:34 AM
By "error code" do you mean the yellow triangle and its associated message?
All that's doing is warning you that the formula may unintentionally be inconsistent with an adjacent formula. If in fact it's giving you the desired result, if in fact it's not in error (as you seem to be saying), that's a judgment call you can make.... and you can select "Ignore error"--essentially saying "It's not an error"--and go on about your business.
This workbook is both an impressive one, and a worrisome one--I say as an outside observer. If you are the only one to use it, the only one to maintain it, and if it's delivering the results you need, then that's fine. But I'd strongly recommend writing, even for yourself, a document that explains what each page is doing, what each formula on each page is doing, and why.... Without that kind of documentation, an Excel spreadsheet can easily go awry and create plausible but deeply erroneous results.
Spreadsheets/workbooks can become overly complicated very easily. The more you can create a fundamental design that is simple and clear, the more trustworthy it can be.
That's partly why, in an earlier posting, I said that if I were doing it, I'd not have separate tabs for each person or site (or whatever it is that those separate tabs represent); instead, I'd create a single database and do the differentiation that the tabs are doing by means of added columns. Then have a summary tab (as you do) or "dashboard" section, that does the calculations needed in tested and consistent fashion. That's a far more reliable way to have consistency in formulas and reliability in results.
You might find it helpful to read the attached article on spreadsheet design.
Jan 24 2022 07:05 AM
Sep 19 2021 11:28 AM
Solution