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formula to return the value of a cell based on a looked up true reference

  1. #1
    sarah
    Guest

    formula to return the value of a cell based on a looked up true reference

    i would like to lookup a cell on a worksheet and if the
    value in the cell is equal to a specific reference value
    such as "test" that it will return the contents of another
    cell in the same row.

  2. #2
    Peo Sjoblom
    Guest

    Re: formula to return the value of a cell based on a looked up true reference

    =VLOOKUP("test",A1:H100,3,0)

    looks up test in A and returns what's in column C in the same row if found
    (3)
    1 is the first column in the lookup table

    Regards,

    Peo Sjoblom

    "sarah" <anonymous@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
    news:279d01c50961$ce3c8e80$a501280a@phx.gbl...
    > i would like to lookup a cell on a worksheet and if the
    > value in the cell is equal to a specific reference value
    > such as "test" that it will return the contents of another
    > cell in the same row.




  3. #3
    Ken Wright
    Guest

    Re: formula to return the value of a cell based on a looked up true reference

    Take a look at the VLOOKUP() function. It essentially takes a value that
    you specify, whether it be a hardcoded
    number/letter/text or a value within a cell reference, and then goes and
    looks it up in a table. It will look for that value in the leftmost column
    of the table, and either find it or the closest match, and will then return
    the corresponding value on the same row, in whatever column of that table
    that you tell it to:-

    Example - With the following table

    D E
    1 1 0.20
    2 10 0.25
    3 20 0.30
    4 30 0.35
    5 40 0.40

    and with your value that you are looking up in say cell A1 (and let's assume
    it is 25 for
    example).

    You can put a formula in pretty much any other cell, that says, take the
    value in cell A1 (25), go
    and look for it in the lefthand column of the table (D1:D5), and then when
    you have found it (or
    the lowest closest number to it), go to the second column (or whichever one
    you specify if there
    are more than 2) and give me the number that it is on the same row in that
    column.

    So, with the formula being =VLOOKUP(A1,D1:E5,2) it will first take the
    value in A1 which is 25,
    then go look for it in the leftmost column (D) of your specified table
    (D1:E5), and it will try to
    find that number. Now it isn't there, so what it will do is look for the
    next lower closest
    number, which in this case will be 20, and the 2 in the formula says to go
    and get the value in
    the 2nd column (E) in your table, that is on the same row as the 20. That
    value in this case is
    0.3

    If you put the value 30 or 31 or 32 etc into A1 now, you will see the result
    of the formula
    change, because now it will either find those numbers or the lower closest
    number (and in each
    case there it is 30), and will subsequently return 0.35 as the corresponding
    value.

    Just to show you how the 2 really works in that formula, if you added one
    more column to your
    table so that it looked like this:-

    D E F
    1 1 0.20 0.15
    2 10 0.25 0.25
    3 20 0.30 0.35
    4 30 0.35 0.45
    5 40 0.40 0.55

    and you actually wanted the value from Col F, then you would simpl;y change
    the 2 in the formula
    to a 3 to signify the third column, eg:-

    =VLOOKUP(A1,D1:E5,3)

    With the examples already given, 25 in A1 would return 0.35, and 30/31/32
    would return 0.45

    The one caveat to all of this (When getting the nearest number is OK) is
    that the data in your
    leftmost column must be sorted in ascending order.


    There are times when you would only want it to give you a value if you had
    an exact match on the
    number, and in this instance you would simply add a 4th argument of 0 or
    FALSE to the formula,
    eg:-

    =VLOOKUP(A1,D1:E5,3,0)

    or

    =VLOOKUP(A1,D1:E5,3,FALSE)

    In these cases you do not need to have the data in your leftmost column
    sorted.

    --
    Regards
    Ken....................... Microsoft MVP - Excel
    Sys Spec - Win XP Pro / XL 97/00/02/03

    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
    It's easier to beg forgiveness than ask permission :-)
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------

    "sarah" <anonymous@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
    news:279d01c50961$ce3c8e80$a501280a@phx.gbl...
    > i would like to lookup a cell on a worksheet and if the
    > value in the cell is equal to a specific reference value
    > such as "test" that it will return the contents of another
    > cell in the same row.




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