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Excel Training

Example of in Index/Match Function

Here I have a table with employees work hours spread over a 7 day week. The employees are on the rows and the days of the week in the columns.  I have created two criteria cells, one for the employee and one for the days.  I then created another cell which is where I will enter my index and match fuctions to automatically find out the hours worked when the criteria cells are populated.  To make this more attractive I have added a combo box using the data valadation feature to enter the criteria as below;

 

 

 

 

Here is the example of the function I used to achieve this result.

=INDEX(C3:J9,MATCH(D12,B3:B9,0),MATCH(D13,C2:J2,0))

For your reference Monday is in cell B2 and John is in cell C3

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Excel Training

INDEX and MATCH based on multiple criteria

The following examples use the INDEX and MATCH worksheet functions in excel 2010 to find a value based on multiple criteria.

Example 1: Data in Columns

Method 1

  1. Start Excel.
  2. Type the following data into a new worksheet:
       A1: Part   B1:  Code   C1:  Price   D1:  Find Part  E1:  Find Code
       A2: x      B2:  11     C2:  5.00    D2:  y          E2:  12
       A3: x      B3:  12     C3:  6.00    D3:  y          E3:  11
       A4: y      B4:  11     C4:  7.00    D4:  x          E4:  12
       A5: y      B5:  12     C5:  8.00    D5:  x          E5:  11
  3. To retrieve the price for part y with code 12 and return the value to cell F2, type the following formula in cell F2:
    =INDEX($C$2:$C$5,MATCH(D2,IF($B$2:$B$5=E2,$A$2:$A$5),0))
  4. Press CTRL+SHIFT+ENTER to enter the formula as an array formula.The formula returns the value 8.00.
  5. Select cell F2, grab the fill handle, and then fill down to cell F5 to retrieve the price for each part and code combination.

Method 2

A second method yields the same results but uses concatenation instead. The following sample formula may be better for matching data against more than two criteria because it does not require nested IF statements. This method is identical to Method 1 except that you replace the formula in step 3 with the following formula:

=INDEX($C$2:$C$5,MATCH(D2&E2,$A$2:$A$5&$B$2:$B$5,0))

Example 2: Data Arranged in Rows

Method 1

  1. Start Excel.
  2. Type the following data into a new worksheet:
       A1: Part        B1: x      C1: x     D1: y       E1: y
       A2: Code        B2: 11     C2: 12    D2: 11      E2: 12
       A3: Price       B3: 5.00   C3: 6.00  D3: 7.00    E3: 8.00
       A4: Find Part   B4: y      C4: y     D4: x       E4: x
       A5: Find Code   B5: 12     C5: 11    D5: 12      E5: 11
  3. To retrieve the price for part y with code 12 and return the value to cell B6, type the following formula in cell B6:
    =INDEX($B$3:$E$3,MATCH(B4,IF($B$2:$E$2=B5,$B$1:$E$1),0))
  4. Press CTRL+SHIFT+ENTER to enter the formula as an array formula.The formula returns the value 8.00.
  5. Select cell B6, grab the fill handle, and then fill right to cell E6 to retrieve the price for each part and code combination.

Method 2

A second method yields the same results but uses concatenation instead. The following sample formula may be better for matching data against more than two criteria because it does not require nested IF statements. This method is identical to Method 1 (under Example 2) except that you replace the formula in step 3 with the following formula:

=INDEX($B$3:$E$3,MATCH(B4&B5,$B$1:$E$1&$B$2:$E$2,0))