Quizzes & Puzzles2 mins ago
pivot tables
How do you create a pivot table using data over 2 sheets?
I have a spreadsheet with 42 columns containing names and flight details, however I need to see how many people are on 1 flight, however the flight details are spread over 2 excel sheets. I am ok doing a normal pivot table with everything coming form one sheet but this is really hard. If you do please treat me as an idiot when explain and I won't take a fence.
Thanks
I have a spreadsheet with 42 columns containing names and flight details, however I need to see how many people are on 1 flight, however the flight details are spread over 2 excel sheets. I am ok doing a normal pivot table with everything coming form one sheet but this is really hard. If you do please treat me as an idiot when explain and I won't take a fence.
Thanks
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by focusjc85. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I don't think you can create a pivot table from two separate ranges of data. I'm assuming the flight details are on two separate sheets for some good reason. I'd be tempted to amalgamate the data you need on a single tab and then run the pivot table from there.
Create a new tab and set up formulae to read the data you need for your passenger data. Then use a lookup formula to bring over the flight data. You should be able to do it in one formula.
Let's say the new tab is called Newtab, and the original tabs are Pax and Fa and Fb respectively with the flight reference in column C of Newtab and column A of Fa and Fb with the data you need to bring across in column B of Fa and Fb
=IF(ISERROR(VLOOKUP(C2,Fa!A:B,2,FALSE)),IF(ISERROR(VLOOKUP(C2,Fb!A:B,2,FALSE)),"Not found",VLOOKUP(C2,Fb!A:B,2,FALSE)),VLOOKUP(C2,Fa!A:B,2,FALSE))
In passing: do you mean 42 columns? or 42 rows? Columns would seem to be an unusual way to set up a spreadsheet like this. Surely it would be easier to put each entry under the one before? I can't imagine having 42 different things I'd want to record about each passenger but I can imagine having 42 passengers. If you've put each passenger into a separate column, then you'd have to change all the Vlookup calls to Hlookup.
Create a new tab and set up formulae to read the data you need for your passenger data. Then use a lookup formula to bring over the flight data. You should be able to do it in one formula.
Let's say the new tab is called Newtab, and the original tabs are Pax and Fa and Fb respectively with the flight reference in column C of Newtab and column A of Fa and Fb with the data you need to bring across in column B of Fa and Fb
=IF(ISERROR(VLOOKUP(C2,Fa!A:B,2,FALSE)),IF(ISERROR(VLOOKUP(C2,Fb!A:B,2,FALSE)),"Not found",VLOOKUP(C2,Fb!A:B,2,FALSE)),VLOOKUP(C2,Fa!A:B,2,FALSE))
In passing: do you mean 42 columns? or 42 rows? Columns would seem to be an unusual way to set up a spreadsheet like this. Surely it would be easier to put each entry under the one before? I can't imagine having 42 different things I'd want to record about each passenger but I can imagine having 42 passengers. If you've put each passenger into a separate column, then you'd have to change all the Vlookup calls to Hlookup.