Documentos de Académico
Documentos de Profesional
Documentos de Cultura
GUIDE TO LOOK UP
DATA FROM LISTS
USING FORMULAS
VOLUME 1
by John Franco
Founder Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com
Brief TOC
Brief TOC ....................................................................................... 2
Introduction ................................................................................. 10
FAQ............................................................................................. 76
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 2 | Page
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
GUIDE TO LOOK UP
DATA FROM LISTS
USING FORMULAS
VOLUME 1
by John Franco
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 3 | Page
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
The Missing Excel® User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using
Formulas Volume 1
by John Franco
© 2009 by Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com
Notice of Rights
If you want to sell this book, use it for commercial purposes or distribute
it in bulk quantities in your workplace, please Contact me
Notice of Liability
The author and publisher have made every effort to ensure the accuracy
of the information herein. However, the information contained in this book
is sold without warranty, either express or implied. Neither the authors
and Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com, nor its dealers or distributors, will
be held liable for any damages to be caused either directly or indirectly by
the instructions contained in this book, or by the software or hardware
products described herein.
Trademark Notice
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 4 | Page
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
About John
John Franco is native of Ecuador, he is a Civil Engineer
and a Bachelor in Applied Linguistics with focus on creating
systems for work, his long term objective in life is helping
others to put their ideas into world.
He quitted his job after having worked 7 years for Norberto Odebrecht
Construction Company (ranked among the World’s Top 50 Largest
Construction Contracting Firms according to Engineering News Record
2008).
"Follow your passion, and success will follow you." - Arthur Buddhold
Are you passionate about Excel or any other given field? Turn your skills
into a profitable online business. You need your Brain, Motivation and the
right tools.
SBI is the Tool I Love
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 5 | Page
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 6 | Page
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
Detailed TOC
Brief TOC ....................................................................................... 2
Introduction ................................................................................. 10
VLOOKP 0.................................................................................. 15
VLOOKUP 1................................................................................ 15
SUMPRODUCT ............................................................................ 16
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 7 | Page
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 8 | Page
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
FAQ............................................................................................. 76
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 9 | Page
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
Introduction
Was One of your Well-Done-Job-Recognitions Related to some
Excel Spreadsheet Work?
Richard Kline
Financial Services Professional
Greater New York City Area
The fact is that most of your data resides in tables; you need to pick
specific items based on some index column that is continually updated at
the backend.
Let me ask you a few questions…
Want to fill tables with data of other tables?
Want to gather information of different tables?
Want to compare tables?
Want to embed a value from a table in a formula?
Want to communicate information of any given item from a table?
Want to analyze information from any given value from a table?
In summary, searching unique items (needles) in lists (haystacks) is a
common task you face, not only to communicate the found value to
others but to use it as part of your analysis by using the value or
embedding it into a formula.
Well, you got the point; LOOKING UP data is an essential task. Despite its
frequency and relevancy for your job, LOOKUP formulas are one of the
main headaches of Excel Users. Why does this happen?
It is not as simple as the formulas appear to be, you need to take into
consideration a lot of Frontend and Backend issues.
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 10 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
John Franco
Founder www.Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 11 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
Chandoo.org
HLOOKUP
VBA LOOKUP formulas
Multiple matches LOOKUP
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 12 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 13 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
Grasp the syntax and basic philosophy behind each LOOKUP formula used
so you can interpret the examples quickly (there is no explanation
provided).
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 14 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
VLOOKP 0
VLOOKUP(lookup_value,table_array,col_index_num,range_lookup)
Where:
VLOOKUP 1
VLOOKUP(lookup_value,table_array,col_index_num,range_lookup)
Where:
Where:
array It is the array containing the index column and columns with
attributes. The index column is not necessarily the left one. In
above table: A2:C6
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 15 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
MATCH(lookup_value,lookup_array,match_type)
Where:
Array Formulas
They evaluate arrays in functions that typically support a cell reference
only, for example:
{=INDEX(Haystack!$A$2:$C$7,MATCH(TRUE,EXACT(Haystack!$
B$2:$B$8,A2),0),1)}
{=INDEX(Haystack!$A$2:$D$7,MATCH(A2,MONTH(Haystack!$B
$2:$B$7),0),3)}
SUMPRODUCT
SUMPRODUCT is a kind of built-in Array Formula. It only serves to
retrieve numeric fields.
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 16 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
SUMPRODUCT((array1=condition1)*(array2=condition2)*array_attribute)
The formula will retrieve the cell in which both conditions are true:
SUMPRODUCT(1*1*attribute)
SUMPRODUCT(1*0*attribute)
Finally, the examples and guidelines provided here were tested on Excel
2007; they consider that the table array is located in a lookup sheet (I
called it “Haystack”) and the LOOKUP formulas are in some frontend
sheet (I called it “Frontend”).
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 17 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
You won’t send a report to your boss with a note indicating which
criteria to apply in Autofilter (Excel does not possess a “Save Filter”
command). This is the reason to use LOOKUP formulas: VLOOKUP,
VLOOKUP + Helper columns, INDEX and MATCH, SUMPRODUCT, Array
formulas, etc.
Frontend the cell on which you put the lookup formula that search
data in the Backend list (lookup array)
Backend the list (lookup array) from which the lookup formula in
the Frontend take the data
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 18 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 19 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
The haystack…
How to…
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 20 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
Avoid mistakes
Take care when you look up numbers with decimal places, the number
that you see on the screen is not necessarily the number Excel deal with.
For example: 5.18 may be 5.179.
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 21 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
The haystack…
How to…
Notes
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 22 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
Avoid Mistakes.
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 23 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
Chandoo.org
Sooner or later you face these limitations; for example: you have your
table arranged to lookup based on the product code but a customer brings
a product name.
Well, for this kind of queries, you need to build an advanced LOOKUP
formula; this is the place to INDEX and MATCH power combination…
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 24 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
The haystack…
How to…
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 25 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
Avoid Mistakes
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 26 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
The haystack…
How to…
Notes
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 27 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
Avoid Mistakes
=INDEX($A$2:$C$12,MATCH(10/12/2007,$C$2:$C$12,0),1)
=INDEX($A$2:$C$12,MATCH(“10/12/2007”,$C$2:$C$12,0),1)
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 28 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 29 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
Use To find
? (question Any single character
mark) For example, sm?th finds "smith"
and "smyth"
* (asterisk) Any number of characters
For example, *east finds
"Northeast" and "Southeast"
~ (tilde) A question mark, asterisk, or
followed by ?, *, tilde
or ~ For example, fy91~? Finds
"fy91?"
Search the text that Begins with “Jav” with the formula
MATCH(“Jav*”,all the other arguments)
Search the text that Ends with “Jones” with the formula
VLOOKUP(“*Jones”,all the other arguments)
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 30 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 31 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
The haystack…
How to…
Notes
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 32 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
Avoid mistakes
More than one entry of the index column may meet the condition.
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 33 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
The haystack…
How to…
Notes
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 34 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
The haystack…
How to…
Notes
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 35 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
The haystack…
How to…
Notes
The lookup_value for the MATCH function could be set in these ways:
"*"&A2&"*", "*ck*" (hard coded) or A2 where the cell would contain
*ck*
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 36 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
The haystack…
How to…
Notes
The lookup_value for the MATCH function could be set in these ways:
A2&"*", "Jav*" (hard coded) or A2 where the cell would contain Jav*
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 37 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
The haystack…
How to…
Notes
The lookup_value for the MATCH function could be set in these ways:
"*"&A2, "*Jones” (hard coded) or A2 where the cell would contain
*Jones
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 38 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
You need the different result in many circumstances; for example, when
you search:
ASCII codes
Product codes
Passwords
User names
Any other case in which you want to return a different value if value
is “A” or “a”; for example to compare index columns from different
tables
But…
You need to use INDEX and MATCH Array Formulas or VLOOKUP + Helper
Columns, two of the more powerful workarounds in Excel.
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 39 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
The haystack…
How to…
Notes
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 40 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
Avoid mistakes
=IF(EXACT(A2,VLOOKUP(A2,Haystack1!$A$2:$C$7,1,0)),VLOOKUP(
A2,Haystack1!$A$2:$C$7,1,0),"No exact match")
It may return “No exact match” when searching “Taylt” because the index
column has “taylt” before “Taylt”.
{=INDEX(Haystack!$A$2:$C$7,MATCH(CODE(A2),CODE(Haystack!
$B$2:$B$7),0),1)}
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 41 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
The haystack…
How to…
Notes
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 42 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
That’s not all, imagine you want to know the greater order made by
“Susan Wilson” on December.
The kinds of multiple index column criteria are endless. For example:
Equal to + Equal to
Equal to + Max
Contains + Equal to
And more…
Pivot Tables and Filter command allow you to do these kind of queries
easily but the fact is that you need that data in a given cell or inside any
given formula.
Unfortunately, neither Excel VLOOKUP nor INDEX and MATCH allow you to
do it directly. Hopefully, there are a lot of workarounds: SUMPRODUCT,
VLOOKUP + Helper Columns, INDEX and MATCH Array Formulas, INDEX
and MATCH Array Formulas + Helper columns.
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 43 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
Example 11 – LOOK UP
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 44 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
The haystack…
How to…
2. Prepare the Helper column with the formula =B2&C2. You can use
CONCATENATE(B2,C2)
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 45 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
The haystack…
How to…
Notes
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 46 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
The haystack…
How to…
Notes
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 47 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
How to…
At the Backend (haystack)
Notes
You can prepare the Helper column with the functions: YEAR,
MONTH, DAY, WEEKDAY or use a specific date criteria with IF,
AND, OR functions
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 48 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
The haystack…
How to…
Notes
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 49 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
The haystack…
How to…
At the Backend (haystack)
Notes
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 50 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
The haystack…
How to…
Notes
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 51 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
Avoid mistakes
Omit the % symbol. Use the decimal version instead. For example
to look 2.5% use 0.025
Take care when you look up numbers with decimal places, the
number that you see on the screen is not necessarily the number
Excel deal with. For example: 5.18 may be 5.179
Use approximate match but be aware that you may get the next
value. For example (in the table above): the found-value for
456.32 would be 342.11 instead of 456.32335
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 52 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
The haystack…
How to…
At the Backend (haystack)
Notes
You can also search the last item by using a Helper column (non-
left) with the numbers: 1, 2, 3, etc and then sorting it
descending. Then use VLOOKUP 0
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 53 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
The haystack…
How to…
At the Backend (haystack)
Notes
You can use MODE function to retrieve the most frequent number
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 54 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
The haystack…
How to…
At the Backend (haystack)
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 55 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
The needle…
The haystack…
How to…
At the Backend (haystack)
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 56 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
The haystack…
How to…
At the Backend (haystack)
Notes
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 57 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
This kind of LOOKUP is different. You don’t have a value to search on the
list; I would call it open LOOKUP.
Biggest quantity
And more…
Pivot Table and Filter command do that very easily but you are here to
search data in tables and put it in a particular cell or inside a formula.
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 58 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
The haystack…
How to…
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 59 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
The haystack…
How to…
Notes
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 60 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
Avoid Mistakes:
=INDEX($A$2:$C$12,MATCH(“10/12/2007”,$C$2:$C$12,0),1)will return
#N/A
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 61 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
In this situation, exact match is not enough, you need to use a value
when the searched value is not on the table.
Why ascending? VLOOKUP 1 start looking for searched value from the
bottom and then, it uses the exact match or the next largest value that is
less than lookup_value is returned, what does this mean? the left most
one. See graphic below…
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 63 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
The haystack…
How to…
Notes
Don’t forget to sort ascending the lookup array based on the index
column
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 64 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
The haystack…
How to…
Notes
Don’t forget to sort ascending the lookup array based on the index
column
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 65 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
The haystack…
How to…
Notes
Don’t forget to sort ascending the lookup array based on the index
column
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 66 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
The haystack…
How to…
Notes
Don’t forget to sort ascending the lookup array based on the index
column
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 67 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
The haystack…
How to…
Notes
Take care of decimal places, for example: 0.75 may return #N/A
because the backend number is 0.748. Excel shows 0.75 (75%) but
internally manage all the digits. See: Example 7 – LOOK UP a
Number with Decimal Places
Don’t forget to sort ascending the lookup array based on the index
column
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 68 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
Avoid mistakes
Don’t hard code percentages this way because you will receive a #N/A
error:
=VLOOKUP("0.75",Haystack!$A$2:$C$6,2,1)
=VLOOKUP("75%",Haystack!$A$2:$C$6,2,1)
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 69 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 70 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 71 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
A student with 72% will receive a C and a student with 89.9% will receive
a C too (he deserves a B).
You need INDEX and MATCH (match_option = less than) and some
midpoint criterion to decide.
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 72 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
The midpoint for the example above is 80, that is (90-70)/2 + 70.
If found-value for 89.9% (70) is less than or equal than 80; then
returned-value is 70, if not, returned-value is 90 (the value located one
row below).
See this example…
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 73 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
The haystack…
How to…
Notes
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 74 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
Table_array Troubleshooting
Delete duplicates in Index column, here are several options:
Delete duplicates in the entire table array for the case or reverse
LOOKUP
Be sure that the Index column is the leftmost one for VLOOKUP
formulas. To move it proceed this way: Cut the column, right click
on the leftmost column header and choose Insert Cut Cells
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 75 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
FAQ
The VLOOKUP is double checked but I keep getting #N/A.
Anyone knows why?
Check if the index column in the lookup array is the leftmost one
Delete leading and trailing spaces in the index column and in the
lookup_value cell
No.
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 76 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
No.
LOOKUP Resources
http://www.cpearson.com/excel/TablesAndLookups.aspx
http://www.mvps.org/dmcritchie/excel/vlookup.htm
http://www.exceltip.com/exceltips.php?view=category&ID=112
http://chandoo.org/wp/2008/11/19/vlookup-match-and-offset-
explained-in-plain-english-spreadcheats/
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 78 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
Excel Resources
This list is not exhaustive but it includes a lot of the good Excel stuff…
Forums
http://www.mrexcel.com/forum/index.php
http://www.excelforum.com
http://www.eng-tips.com/
http://www.allexperts.com/el/Excel/
http://www.tek-tips.com/
Blogs
http://www.chandoo.org/wp/
http://www.blog.contextures.com/
http://www.blogs.msdn.com/
www.cpearson.com
www.contextures.com/
http://spreadsheetpage.com/
http://www.exceluser.com/
http://www.mvps.org/links.html#Excel
http://www.ozgrid.com/
www.exceltip.com
http://www.excel.tips.net/
http://www.peltiertech.com/
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 79 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
Robert Parker
Project Manager at LeTourneau Technologies
Longview, Texas Area
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 80 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
Keith Gunaratne
Chartered Civil Engineer and Information
Management Consultant
Director at JIK Solutions
London, United Kingdom
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 81 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
It is FREE
Download
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 82 | P a g e
The Missing Excel User Guide to Look Up Data from Lists Using Formulas - Vol 1©
Visit Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com
Excel-Spreadsheet-Authors.com 83 | P a g e