What formula can I use to find a specific word between two dates?
I know I can use countifs to find the word for the entire column - but is it possible to do so between two dates?
I've been trying to combine these two formulas to no avail
=countifs(C8:C182,">="&C6,C8:C182,"<="&D6) - this has the dates and can find the amount of times a deal is created.
=countifs(F8:F187,D1) - this can find the amount of times a certain type of deal comes up.
In the image I want to find out what is D and E without having to manually count/ split the data by date aha.
Appreciate the help!
Related
The Issue
In simple terms, I am trying to set a formula for an alternating pattern. The issue I keep running into is the fact that there are two alternating values, and Google Sheets doesn't like to repeat only one of those values without the other.
I have created an example sheet to demonstrate my issue. In Column A, a date is input. Column B and Column C then autofill with the day of the week and AM or PM respectively. Every other value in Column C alternates between AM and PM. I am trying to set it up so that the row is blank until a value in input in Column A. The issue comes when there is an odd number of Dates in Column A. Note that the alternating AM/PM pattern will never change.
What I've Tried
As seen in the image above, there are three main methods that I have tried. The data in C2:C8 is the desired result.
Method 1:
E2: =transpose(split({rept(join(";",{"AM";" "})&";",(roundup(counta(A2:A9)/2)))},";"))
F3: =transpose(split({rept(join(";",{"PM";" "})&";",(counta(A2:A9)/2))},";"))
These formulas work separately, and best represent what I am trying to accomplish, but I have not found a way to combine them to work together in one column.
Method 2:
H2: =transpose(split({rept(join(";",{"AM";"PM"})&";",(roundup(counta(A2:A9)/2)))},";"))
This is essentially the same as Method 1, but put into one formula. The issue here is that Google Sheets doesn't like to repeat half a number of times. So if the number of times to repeat (counta(A2:A9)/2) contains a half (i.e. 3.5), it will still round down to the nearest whole number.
Method 3:
J2: =ArrayFormula(TEXT(SEQUENCE(3),"")&{"AM";"PM"})
This one appeared most promising to me because when incrementing by one, it added one row, but I quickly ran into the issue where if I went over a sequence number of 2, it threw the error Array arguments to CONCAT are of different size.
References
I have used various search terms and websites to try to solve this, and have yet to find something that works. I may be missing something very simple, though, and hopefully this is a quick solution.
Example Sheet:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1I3EtptFLfDHpAQ8AR6Lwa01dSpJ3Cy8MTX1_OjHExSc/edit?usp=sharing
All my formulas are derived from the websites below:
REPT Function in Google Sheets
How to Repeat Multiple Columns N Times in Google Sheets
Delete everything in Col C (including the header) and place this formula in C1:
=ArrayFormula({"AM/PM"; IF(A2:A="",,IF(COUNTIFS(A2:A,A2:A,ROW(A2:A),"<="&ROW(A2:A))=1,"AM","PM"))})
The COUNTIFS finds the number of matches for the date "up to this row" for every row. Since that count will (or should) only ever be a 1 or a 2, the IF makes easy work of assigning "AM" or "PM" accordingly.
If I understand correctly it is enough to use ISEVEN function to alternate by rows:
=ArrayFormula(IF(A2:A,CHOOSE(ISEVEN(ROW(A2:A))+1,"PM","AM"),))
I have been struggling for a few days with this problem. Anyone kind enough to show some interested will be highly appreciated.
I have the table shown below.
Suppose columns represent months. I would like to know up to which months' orders have been used up.
I have tried criteria with sums of demand up to that point but I cannot seem to use criteria with the sum of total demand and an array of sums of "total units ordered".
F.e. =COUNTIF(SUM($S$2:($S$2:S$2))<SUM($S$1:S$1) is not possible.
I have tried using an index-match combo but i would have to deduct the previous max sum of "total units ordered" that meets the condition up to the previous cell.
Is that possible without using vba?
Thanks in advance for your interest and time spent.
You can use a standard method of getting running totals using Sumif, combined with Match:
=ArrayFormula(match(sumif(column(S1:Z1),"<="&column(S1:Z1),S1:Z1),sumif(column(S2:Z2),"<"&column(S2:Z2),S2:Z2))-1)
I put rows 3 and 4 in just as a check of my calculations and to show the results of the two Sumifs evaluations - they aren't necessary.
You may wish to specify what should happen if the demands add up to exactly 3000, for example. The above formula would actually go to the next month, so may need some refinement if that is not what you want.
I'm trying create a list of sequential dates from a set date to the most recent date in another column.
=ARRAYFORMULA(IF(OR(A2:A=MAX(C:C),A2:A=""),"",DATEVALUE(A2:A+1)))
I use MAX() to find the dates most recent date in column C. What I'm trying to get this formula to do is to recursively check the date in the cell above to determine if the max date has been reached. I've made sure A2 already has the set starting date.
The output is in only one cell though and I don't know why.
Thank you for the help.
What appears to be troubling your current array formula is that as defined it goes on forever and is self-referential. There may be a way to make it by setting preferences to be iterative and helping it interpret getting to repeated cells with "" as convergence.
Here is a way to sidestep those issues. You can bulletproof it more (for example, by encasing it in an IFERROR), but basically you can calculate exactly how many entries you need, and then set your range in the Array formula accordingly. In A3 you place the following:
=arrayformula(DATEVALUE(Row(indirect("A3:A"&(max(C:C)-A2+2)))+A2-2))
which will construct the exact range you want, then calculate each entry with an explicit rather than recursive formula.
EDIT: the above implementation assumes you need at least 2 dates. You can handle that case and other weird ones with the following, less readable formula, =if(max(C:C)>A2,iferror(arrayformula(DATEVALUE(Row(indirect("A3:A"&(max(C:C)-$A$2+2)))+$A$2-2))),"")
I'm trying to do a couple of different things with a spreadsheet in Google and running into some problems with the formulas I am using. I'm hoping someone might be able to direct me to a better solution or be able to correct the current issue I'm having.
First off all, here is a view of the data on Sheet 1 that I am pulling from:
Example Spreadsheet
The first task I'm trying to accomplish is to create a sheet that lists all of these shift days with the date in one column and the subject ("P: Ben" or S: Nicole") in another column. This sheet would be used to import the data via a CSV into our calendar system each month. I tried doing an Index-Match where it used the date to pull the associated values however I found that I had to keep adjusting the formula offsets in order to capture new information. It doesn't seem like Index-Match works when multiple rows/columns are involved. Is there a better way to pull this information?
The second task I am trying to accomplish is to create a new tab which lists all the dates a specific person is assigned too (that way this tab will update in real time and everyone can just look at their own sheet to see what days they are on-call). However, I run into the same problem here because for each new row I have to change the formula to reflect the correct information otherwise it doesn't pull the correct cell when it finds a match.
I would appreciate any and all information/advice on how to accomplish these tasks with the formula combination I mentioned or suggestions on other formulas to use that I have not been able to find.
Thanks in advance!
Brandon. There are a few ways to attack your tasks, but looking at the structure of your data, I would use curly brackets {} to create arrays. Here is an excerpt of how Google explains arrays in Sheets:
You can also create your own arrays in a formula in your spreadsheet
by using brackets { }. The brackets allow you to group together
values, while you use the following punctuation to determine which
order the values are displayed in:
Commas: Separate columns to help you write a row of data in an array.
For example, ={1, 2} would place the number 1 in the first cell and
the number 2 in the cell to the right in a new column.
Semicolons: Separate rows to help you write a column of data in an array. For
example, ={1; 2} would place the number 1 in the first cell and the
number 2 in the cell below in a new row.
Note: For countries that use
commas as decimal separators (for example €1,00), commas would be
replaced by backslashes () when creating arrays.
You can join multiple ranges into one continuous range using this same
punctuation. For example, to combine values from A1-A10 with the
values from D1-D10, you can use the following formula to create a
range in a continuous column: ={A1:A10; D1:D10}
Knowing that, here's a sample sheet of your data.
First Task:
create a sheet that lists all of these shift days with the date in one
column and the subject ("P: Ben" or S: Nicole") in another column.
To organize dates and subjects into discrete arrays, we'll collect them using curly brackets...
Dates: {A3:G3,A7:G7,A11:G11,A15:G15}
Subjects: {A4:G4,A5:G5,A8:G8,A9:G9,A12:G12,A13:G13,A16:G16,A17:G17}
This actually produces two rows rather than columns, but we'll deal with that in a minute. You'll note that, because there are two subjects per every one date, we need to effectively double each date captured.
Dates: {A3:G3,A3:G3,A7:G7,A7:G7,A11:G11,A11:G11,A15:G15,A15:G15}
Subjects: {A4:G4,A5:G5,A8:G8,A9:G9,A12:G12,A13:G13,A16:G16,A17:G17}
Still with me? If so, all that's left is to (a) turn these two rows into two columns using the TRANSPOSE function, (b) combine our two columns using another pair of curly brackets and a semicolon and (c) add a SORT function to list the dates in chronological order...
=SORT(TRANSPOSE({{A3:G3,A3:G3,A7:G7,A7:G7,A11:G11,A11:G11,A15:G15,A15:G15};{A4:G4,A5:G5,A8:G8,A9:G9,A12:G12,A13:G13,A16:G16,A17:G17}}),1,TRUE)
Second Task:
create a new tab which lists all the dates a specific person is
assigned too (that way this tab will update in real time and everyone
can just look at their own sheet to see what days they are on-call).
Assuming the two-column array we just created lives in A2:B53 on a new sheet called "Shifts," then we can use the FILTER function and SEARCH based on each name. The formula at the top of Ben's sheet would look like this:
=FILTER(Shifts!A2:B53,SEARCH("Ben",Shifts!B2:B53))
Hopefully this helps, but please let me know if I've misinterpreted anything. Cheers.
I have essentially a log file in a Google Sheets. Columns are "Date/time", "user", "asset accessed", and there will be multiple entries for the same date, though usually not time.
I'd like to use the timeline graph to show user activity, but the graph requires an aggregate view with one date (no time) per row, with a numeric count in second col. Is there a way using functions within Google Sheets to generate an aggregate "view" of this data and pass this to the timeline graph?
Well, I guess you'll have to create an auxiliary sheet, or just some columns with the summarized values for you chart.
From your description, I'll assume you're using 3 columns (ABC). Let's use columns D, E and F with the following formulas:
=ArrayFormula(Trunc(A:A))
=Unique(D:D)
=ArrayFormula(CountIf(D:D;E:E))
Since date values are actually a number (qtt of days since the epoch), and hours are decimals, the Trunc formula gets rid of the "time" part and leaves only the date. Just format the cells (apparently numbers) as dates and you'll see. Then Unique and CountIf do the summarizing.
There's surely different ways of doing this, perhaps more "elegantly", in a single formula. But I think that in this way it's more easy to understand and learn from. Also, you'll probably need to adapt the ranges to your actual columns positions (I hope that's not a problem).