I'm looking for some expertise with formulas. I've got a raw data source and need to be able to summarise it in a separate sheet based on a number of different variables of both number and text formats. I've tried some COUNTIFS, INDEX and other formulas that I've seen published on this site, but it's just not working the way I need it to.
The column headings are:
Timestamp
HRBP (name)
Date
Area name
Team name
Enquiry Type
Enquiry Summary
The summary data I need is:
Total number of Enquiry Type by HRBP by Area between specified date range, where I can enter the value of HRBP, Area, and dates in defined cells, and the 'count' of Enquiry Type will be displayed below (and then I can create graphs/charts).
My logic would be something along the lines of:
COUNT [Enquiry Type] IF ([HRBP = 'x'] AND [AREA = 'y'] AND [Date >='z'] AND [DATE <= 'a'])
Can someone please help get to my end goal? Or does anyone know of an App solution that could create this analysis easily enough - the data is entered via a Google Form at front end.
I think COUNTIFS is what you're looking for. In my dummy data I used this formula:
=countifs(B:B,"a",C:C,"x",D:D,"y",E:E,">=7/30/2015",E:E,"<=7/31/2015")
It's put in the cell G2 in the image:
Related
I am trying to find a formula that will give me the count of unique dates a persons' name appears in one of two different columns and/or both columns.
I have a set of data where a person's name may show up in a "driver" column or a "helper" column, multiple times over the course of one day. Throughout the day some drivers might also be helpers and some days a driver may come in for duty but only as a helper. Basically all drivers can be helpers, but not all helpers can be drivers.
I've attached a link to a sample sheet for more clarity.
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1GqNa1hrViX4B6mkL3wWcqEsy87gmdw77DhkhIaswLyI/edit?usp=sharing
I've created a REPORTS tab with a SORT(UNIQUE(FLATTEN)) Formula to give me a list of the names that appear in the DATA Tab.
I'm looking for a way to count the unique dates a name from the name (Column A of the REPORTS Tab) appears in either of the two columns (Column B and/or C of the DATA Tab) to determine the total number of days worked so I can calculate the total number of days off over the range queried.
I've tried several iterations of countif, countunique, and countuniqueifs but cannot seem to find a way to return the correct values.
Any advice on how to make this work would be appreciated.
I think if you put this formula in cell b7 you'll be set. You can drag it down.
=Counta(Unique(filter(DATA!A:A,(DATA!C:C=A7)+(DATA!B:B=A7))))
Here's a working version of your file.
For anyone interested, Google Sheets' Filter function differs slightly from Excel's Filter function because Sheets attempts to make it easier for users to apply multiple conditions by simply separating each parameter with a comma. Example: =filter(A:A,A:A<>"",B:B<>"bad result") will provide different results between the Sheets and Excel.
Excel Filter requires users to specify multiple conditions within parenthesis and denote each criterion be flagged with an OR condition with a + else an AND condition with a multiplication sign *. While this can appear daunting and bizarre to multiply arrays that have text in it, it allows for more flexibility.
To Google's credit, if one follows the required Excel Syntax (as I did in this answer) then the functions will behave the same.
delete what you got and use:
=QUERY(QUERY(UNIQUE({DATA!A:B; DATA!A:A, DATA!C:C}),
"select Col2,count(Col1),"&D2&"-count(Col2)
where Col2 is not null
group by Col2"),
"offset 1", 0)
I want to do a complex formula using google sheets:
I have a list of place that will be visited by different people.
Some places are not to be visited, marked with /
Some places need to be assigned, marked with ?
Wanted outcome:
A list of cells that changes every day automatic.
An overview of who is going where that day and what needs to be assigned.
So I need a formula that can select a row based on today() and then filter out Persons in that row. Then for each person, another formula that looks up the first row in the table and puts duplicates together.
Example:
Wanted outcome:
Link to excel file, but it needs to work in google sheets too: xlsx
My solution is not the most elegant but it does the job.
First I build a column with date and unique persons or ? in this column:
=unique(sort(transpose(index(A1:H10,match(today(),A1:A10,0)))))
Then I find Places corresponding to these persons (I use filter function for it and then I use textjoin to keep them in single cell).
The formula is copied down as filter function does not accept a range and arrayformula as a filtering criterium.
My solution is available here:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1GTy_UaFP8LbA8OLnEhT_R_twpDCIWCuvQfBAigqtbR0/copy
I'm looking for an easy way to account my son's food intake. The trouble is, all of the forms we've used to date are arduous when trying to collect data straight into spreadsheets. So I thought we could use an IFTT/Do button.
A couple problems I need help with:
IFTTT inputs the data as text: how do I use the DATE function to reformat the cell data for each date?
The "button" we're using represents 30 mL of milk but in a single meal he may eat much more - so we're pressing the button multiple times. What array formula can I use to add all formula for each day?
Here's a link to a sample spreadsheet so far. https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1ds_IvgS5JWuFmsEipk-wUcsfGQVSVD1tXPydDCoT7Xo/edit?usp=sharing
I hope you enjoy this special time.
I would leave column A alone, probably you get no control on that.
But for column B, if you get to, I follow your lead on the condition, but I would want numbers for the results so I can do math on them, so =ARRAYFORMULA(if(A2:A>"0",30,0))
I introduced a column C for Dates and a Column D for times and did the following in C2 to get them:
=arrayformula(if(isblank(A2:A),"",SPLIT(A2:A," at ",false))).
To make these look nice, I formatted the respective columns as dates and times.
In column E I wanted the various dates, so I wrote in E2,
=unique(C2:C)
Then to get the sums per date I had had a really gross QUERY for SUM(B) where C = Date..., and then I saw the comment with the sumif idea. So in F2 you can put the following and drag down as needed:
=sumif(C2:C,E2,B2:B)
and you have your totals by day.
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.
For reference, please visit this Google Doc which is a simplified example of my problem, which is to determine total sales in Blue and Green markets each month.
Each month, I receive a new sales report from accounting for all of our markets and I add the sheet to the main workbook. My team is in charge of assigning "colors" to the markets and tracking this. As it's privileged information, we can't have accounting auto-tag these in the data they send over.
One solution would be, for each new monthly report that comes in, tag each city with the color. However, we have hundreds of markets and this isn't very practical to go through each time.
I assume that a SUMIFS function would work here, but am unsure how to set it up when there are values spread across multiple sheets.
You can use this function in B8 of February tab:
=SUM(IF(COUNTIFS($A$2:$A$5,Color!$A$2:$A$5,Color!$B$2:$B$5,'Sales February'!A8)>0,$B$2:$B$5,0))
COUNTIFS($A$2:$A$5,Color!$A$2:$A$5,Color!$B$2:$B$5,'Sales February'!A8)>0 gets an array of the countries that belong to the colour specified in A8 of the current tab (Would that be possible to put only Green and remove February Sales from that cell?).
If the country belongs to the particular colour, then return the array of corresponding values in column $B$2:$B$5.
Lastly, sum this array.
Note:
You need to array enter this formula in Excel (by holding Ctrl+Shift then hit Enter after typing in the formula).
In Google Spreadsheets, you array enter a formula by wrapping the formula around =ArrayFormula(), meaning you use:
=ArrayFormula(SUM(IF(COUNTIFS($A$2:$A$5,Color!$A$2:$A$5,Color!$B$2:$B$5,'Sales February'!A8)>0,$B$2:$B$5,0)))
In Excel you can use this "array formula"
=SUM(SUMIF(A$2:A$5,IF(Color!B$2:B$5=A8,Color!A$2:A$5),B$2:B$5))
confirmed with CTRL+SHIFT+ENTER
The same formula works in google docs if wrapped in arrayformula, i.e.
=arrayformula(SUM(SUMIF(A$2:A$5,IF(Color!B$2:B$5=A8,Color!A$2:A$5),B$2:B$5)))
or you can use FILTER as user3465711 suggests, i.e.
=SUM(filter(B$2:B$5,isnumber(match(A$2:A$5,IF(Color!B$2:B$5=A8,Color!A$2:A$5),0))))