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How to use the SUMPRODUCT function in Excel, one of Excel’s math and trig functions, using multiplication, addition, subtraction, and/or division to return the sum of the products of corresponding ranges or arrays.
The SUMIFS function, one of the math and trig functions, adds all of its arguments that meet multiple criteria. For example, you would use SUMIFS to sum the number of retailers in the country who (1) reside in a single zip code and (2) whose profits exceed a specific dollar value.
How to correct a #VALUE! error. Applies To. #VALUE is Excel's way of saying, "There's something wrong with the way your formula is typed. Or, there's something wrong with the cells you are referencing." The error is very general, and it can be hard to find the exact cause of it.
You can use a simple formula to sum numbers in a range (a group of cells), but the SUM function is easier to use when you’re working with more than a few numbers. For example =SUM (A2:A6) is less likely to have typing errors than =A2+A3+A4+A5+A6.
Use the XLOOKUP function to find things in a table or range by row. For example, look up the price of an automotive part by the part number, or find an employee name based on their employee ID.
A 3-D reference is useful and convenient way to reference several worksheets that follow the same pattern and cells on each worksheet contain the same type of data, such as when you consolidate budget data from different departments in your organization.
You can quickly enter a simple GETPIVOTDATA formula by typing = (the equal sign) in the cell you want to return the value to and then clicking the cell in the PivotTable that contains the data you want to return.
The SUM function adds values. You can add individual values, cell references or ranges or a mix of all three. For example: =SUM (A2:A10) Adds the values in cells A2:10. =SUM (A2:A10, C2:C10) Adds the values in cells A2:10, as well as cells C2:C10.
Click a cell in the list range. Using the example, click any cell in the range A6:C10. On the Data tab, in the Sort & Filter group, click Advanced. Do one of the following: To filter the list range by hiding rows that don't match your criteria, click Filter the list, in-place.
PMT, one of the financial functions, calculates the payment for a loan based on constant payments and a constant interest rate. Use the Excel Formula Coach to figure out a monthly loan payment. At the same time, you'll learn how to use the PMT function in a formula.
To change the layout of a PivotTable, you can change the PivotTable form and the way that fields, columns, rows, subtotals, empty cells and lines are displayed. To change the format of the PivotTable, you can apply a predefined style, banded rows, and conditional formatting.