Excel array index/match vlookup to another table and multiply results
I have 2 tables:
- Table1 - FG parts with QOH
- Table2 - BOM of Comp related to FG and CompQtyPer
Comp is known and want to sum table1 FG_QOH where the FG matches the Comp in Table2 multiplied against CompQtyPer
Table2 cell E3 is related to FG 'e' and has CompQtyPer=2. Table1 FG 'e' has FG_QOH=5. So 2*5 = 10
Table2 cell E6 is related to FG 'c' and has CompQtyPer=3. Table1 FG 'c' has FG_QOH=3. So 3*3 = 9
TotQty = 19 (10+9)
arrays excel-formula
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I have 2 tables:
- Table1 - FG parts with QOH
- Table2 - BOM of Comp related to FG and CompQtyPer
Comp is known and want to sum table1 FG_QOH where the FG matches the Comp in Table2 multiplied against CompQtyPer
Table2 cell E3 is related to FG 'e' and has CompQtyPer=2. Table1 FG 'e' has FG_QOH=5. So 2*5 = 10
Table2 cell E6 is related to FG 'c' and has CompQtyPer=3. Table1 FG 'c' has FG_QOH=3. So 3*3 = 9
TotQty = 19 (10+9)
arrays excel-formula
add a comment |
I have 2 tables:
- Table1 - FG parts with QOH
- Table2 - BOM of Comp related to FG and CompQtyPer
Comp is known and want to sum table1 FG_QOH where the FG matches the Comp in Table2 multiplied against CompQtyPer
Table2 cell E3 is related to FG 'e' and has CompQtyPer=2. Table1 FG 'e' has FG_QOH=5. So 2*5 = 10
Table2 cell E6 is related to FG 'c' and has CompQtyPer=3. Table1 FG 'c' has FG_QOH=3. So 3*3 = 9
TotQty = 19 (10+9)
arrays excel-formula
I have 2 tables:
- Table1 - FG parts with QOH
- Table2 - BOM of Comp related to FG and CompQtyPer
Comp is known and want to sum table1 FG_QOH where the FG matches the Comp in Table2 multiplied against CompQtyPer
Table2 cell E3 is related to FG 'e' and has CompQtyPer=2. Table1 FG 'e' has FG_QOH=5. So 2*5 = 10
Table2 cell E6 is related to FG 'c' and has CompQtyPer=3. Table1 FG 'c' has FG_QOH=3. So 3*3 = 9
TotQty = 19 (10+9)
arrays excel-formula
arrays excel-formula
edited Nov 19 '18 at 18:48
Forward Ed
6,58911336
6,58911336
asked Nov 19 '18 at 18:21
GrahamGraham
93
93
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add a comment |
1 Answer
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You can achieve this by creating a helper column to table 2 which basically ties table 1 to table 2 and calculates the number of FG you need for each comp:
I placed table 1 in A1:B6, Table 2 in F1:H6, and Table 3 in K1:L1
In I1:I6 create a helper column using the following formula:
=INDEX($B$1:$B$6,MATCH(F1,$A$1:$A$6,0))*H1
It grabs the QTY from table 1 and multiplies it by the QTY in table 2. It makes the next part in Table 3 very easy, and keeps your formulas relatively simple and easy to maintain.
In K1 place the comp you want to look up
In L1 use the following formula:
=SUMPRODUCT((G1:G6=K1)*I1:I6)
Nice solution! I would use the slightly shorter function in the I column: =VLOOKUP(F1;$A$1:$B$6;2)*H1 Just a matter of taste I assume.
– W_O_L_F
Nov 20 '18 at 14:24
add a comment |
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
You can achieve this by creating a helper column to table 2 which basically ties table 1 to table 2 and calculates the number of FG you need for each comp:
I placed table 1 in A1:B6, Table 2 in F1:H6, and Table 3 in K1:L1
In I1:I6 create a helper column using the following formula:
=INDEX($B$1:$B$6,MATCH(F1,$A$1:$A$6,0))*H1
It grabs the QTY from table 1 and multiplies it by the QTY in table 2. It makes the next part in Table 3 very easy, and keeps your formulas relatively simple and easy to maintain.
In K1 place the comp you want to look up
In L1 use the following formula:
=SUMPRODUCT((G1:G6=K1)*I1:I6)
Nice solution! I would use the slightly shorter function in the I column: =VLOOKUP(F1;$A$1:$B$6;2)*H1 Just a matter of taste I assume.
– W_O_L_F
Nov 20 '18 at 14:24
add a comment |
You can achieve this by creating a helper column to table 2 which basically ties table 1 to table 2 and calculates the number of FG you need for each comp:
I placed table 1 in A1:B6, Table 2 in F1:H6, and Table 3 in K1:L1
In I1:I6 create a helper column using the following formula:
=INDEX($B$1:$B$6,MATCH(F1,$A$1:$A$6,0))*H1
It grabs the QTY from table 1 and multiplies it by the QTY in table 2. It makes the next part in Table 3 very easy, and keeps your formulas relatively simple and easy to maintain.
In K1 place the comp you want to look up
In L1 use the following formula:
=SUMPRODUCT((G1:G6=K1)*I1:I6)
Nice solution! I would use the slightly shorter function in the I column: =VLOOKUP(F1;$A$1:$B$6;2)*H1 Just a matter of taste I assume.
– W_O_L_F
Nov 20 '18 at 14:24
add a comment |
You can achieve this by creating a helper column to table 2 which basically ties table 1 to table 2 and calculates the number of FG you need for each comp:
I placed table 1 in A1:B6, Table 2 in F1:H6, and Table 3 in K1:L1
In I1:I6 create a helper column using the following formula:
=INDEX($B$1:$B$6,MATCH(F1,$A$1:$A$6,0))*H1
It grabs the QTY from table 1 and multiplies it by the QTY in table 2. It makes the next part in Table 3 very easy, and keeps your formulas relatively simple and easy to maintain.
In K1 place the comp you want to look up
In L1 use the following formula:
=SUMPRODUCT((G1:G6=K1)*I1:I6)
You can achieve this by creating a helper column to table 2 which basically ties table 1 to table 2 and calculates the number of FG you need for each comp:
I placed table 1 in A1:B6, Table 2 in F1:H6, and Table 3 in K1:L1
In I1:I6 create a helper column using the following formula:
=INDEX($B$1:$B$6,MATCH(F1,$A$1:$A$6,0))*H1
It grabs the QTY from table 1 and multiplies it by the QTY in table 2. It makes the next part in Table 3 very easy, and keeps your formulas relatively simple and easy to maintain.
In K1 place the comp you want to look up
In L1 use the following formula:
=SUMPRODUCT((G1:G6=K1)*I1:I6)
answered Nov 19 '18 at 19:05
Forward EdForward Ed
6,58911336
6,58911336
Nice solution! I would use the slightly shorter function in the I column: =VLOOKUP(F1;$A$1:$B$6;2)*H1 Just a matter of taste I assume.
– W_O_L_F
Nov 20 '18 at 14:24
add a comment |
Nice solution! I would use the slightly shorter function in the I column: =VLOOKUP(F1;$A$1:$B$6;2)*H1 Just a matter of taste I assume.
– W_O_L_F
Nov 20 '18 at 14:24
Nice solution! I would use the slightly shorter function in the I column: =VLOOKUP(F1;$A$1:$B$6;2)*H1 Just a matter of taste I assume.
– W_O_L_F
Nov 20 '18 at 14:24
Nice solution! I would use the slightly shorter function in the I column: =VLOOKUP(F1;$A$1:$B$6;2)*H1 Just a matter of taste I assume.
– W_O_L_F
Nov 20 '18 at 14:24
add a comment |
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