Hello Excel Users and Experts,
With:
Sumproduct((array1=condition1)*(array2=condition2) *(array3))
Can array1 be column A, array2 be column C and array3 be column B? Or does
2 have to be to the right of 1 and 3 to the right of 2?
I could have swore I returned an array3 that was between 1 and 2 once upon a
time, but today I quot;sworequot; because I could not make that work. Moved the
array3 info to the right of 1 and 2, bingo, success.
Thanks folks.
Regards,
Howard
They can be any columns--well, you can't use the whole column--but the order
isn't important.
quot;L. Howard Kittlequot; wrote:
gt;
gt; Hello Excel Users and Experts,
gt;
gt; With:
gt;
gt; Sumproduct((array1=condition1)*(array2=condition2) *(array3))
gt;
gt; Can array1 be column A, array2 be column C and array3 be column B? Or does
gt; 2 have to be to the right of 1 and 3 to the right of 2?
gt;
gt; I could have swore I returned an array3 that was between 1 and 2 once upon a
gt; time, but today I quot;sworequot; because I could not make that work. Moved the
gt; array3 info to the right of 1 and 2, bingo, success.
gt;
gt; Thanks folks.
gt; Regards,
gt; Howard
--
Dave Peterson
As Dave says, the order is irrelevant.
But I'm curious with your statement
quot;Can array1 be column A ...quot;. As far as I'm aware the arrays can't be
entire columns, only a parts of columns. Can you post the formula if
using the entire column works?
Thanks,--
John James
------------------------------------------------------------------------
John James's Profile: www.excelforum.com/member.php...oamp;userid=32690
View this thread: www.excelforum.com/showthread...hreadid=531727Well, I regrouped with Dave and John's advice. It works as advertised... I
must of had my columns values screwed up or perhaps the lookup values...???
Rats!!! I'm smarter than this but went duhhhhh...here.
Thanks Dave and John... will report back with the next brain cramp. lt;bggt;
Thanks again.
Regards,
Howard
quot;L. Howard Kittlequot; gt; wrote in message
. ..
gt; Hello Excel Users and Experts,
gt;
gt; With:
gt;
gt; Sumproduct((array1=condition1)*(array2=condition2) *(array3))
gt;
gt; Can array1 be column A, array2 be column C and array3 be column B? Or
gt; does 2 have to be to the right of 1 and 3 to the right of 2?
gt;
gt; I could have swore I returned an array3 that was between 1 and 2 once upon
gt; a time, but today I quot;sworequot; because I could not make that work. Moved the
gt; array3 info to the right of 1 and 2, bingo, success.
gt;
gt; Thanks folks.
gt; Regards,
gt; Howard
gt;
Or maybe you used different sized ranges????
quot;L. Howard Kittlequot; wrote:
gt;
gt; Well, I regrouped with Dave and John's advice. It works as advertised... I
gt; must of had my columns values screwed up or perhaps the lookup values...???
gt;
gt; Rats!!! I'm smarter than this but went duhhhhh...here.
gt;
gt; Thanks Dave and John... will report back with the next brain cramp. lt;bggt;
gt;
gt; Thanks again.
gt;
gt; Regards,
gt; Howard
gt;
gt; quot;L. Howard Kittlequot; gt; wrote in message
gt; . ..
gt; gt; Hello Excel Users and Experts,
gt; gt;
gt; gt; With:
gt; gt;
gt; gt; Sumproduct((array1=condition1)*(array2=condition2) *(array3))
gt; gt;
gt; gt; Can array1 be column A, array2 be column C and array3 be column B? Or
gt; gt; does 2 have to be to the right of 1 and 3 to the right of 2?
gt; gt;
gt; gt; I could have swore I returned an array3 that was between 1 and 2 once upon
gt; gt; a time, but today I quot;sworequot; because I could not make that work. Moved the
gt; gt; array3 info to the right of 1 and 2, bingo, success.
gt; gt;
gt; gt; Thanks folks.
gt; gt; Regards,
gt; gt; Howard
gt; gt;
--
Dave Peterson
- May 16 Wed 2007 20:37
Sumproduct arrays
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