A1 = 1890
B1 = 1781
C1 = (B1-A1)/A1
*100 to get % or set % format
I know there are some spreadsheet wizards on here and that this is an easy question I just can't get my head around it
A= 1890
B= 1781
C= -5.77%
so cell C is the % difference between Cell A and Cell B,
My question. What is the formula i type in Cell C to get the above answer please.
Thank you for your help.
A1 = 1890
B1 = 1781
C1 = (B1-A1)/A1
*100 to get % or set % format
=100%-(B1/A1)
Not sure if this works any differently to the above.
Thank you both, for replying so quickly.
Wish I’d paid more attention at school, in fact I wish I’d turned up more at school.
(B1/A1)-1
*100 or adjust the cell format to %
Dave E
Skating away on the thin ice of a new day
I’m intrigued by this formula lark.
Will have to try it out!
Likewise, with Excel being a weak point for me!
Thanks guys.
Any other useful excel tips please post here.
I've a mate who's a bit of an Excel whizz and he manipulates large databases very easily. I suspect I only use about 2% of its functionality and power but well worth taking the time to learn a few of the basics as it's a real time saver when you know them and can set up an efficient spreadsheet/database from the outset.
Oh and Pivots 😀
With respect to OP, the original problem is just one of maths.
Also with respect, I think the OP had done the maths...and provided the answer. The question related to how to achieve the same in Excel. Perhaps you might had meant that the problem was one of how to express the maths algebraically (and in a format compatible with the spreadsheet)...?
Nothing says 'Saturday night' like a spreadsheet!
Sent from my H3113 using Tapatalk
If you need the outcome to be expressed to 2dp (rather than merely displayed to two dp, for example for further calcs comparisons etc), you’ll need to encase the formula with =round([formula],2)
Excel's wonderful. I get it to run off to the park run website every Monday, pulling back the total number of runs all of our school runners have done, seeing if the number has increased since last time, graphing the result. It's a fabulous program.
Have also managed to get it to go off to the consortium website to check a list of products to see if the price has changed. Basically it can load a specified URL into an object that it can then parse. It's really powerful.
It may as well be hieroglyphs! I have not a clue what you are talking about.
Indeed it is. I started using spreadsheets with Lotus123 way back when, and once filled a complete office wall with taped together printouts of a massive Excel spreadsheet I'd created so I could walk other people in the team through it
I use it extensively, including cataloguing every game Doncaster Rovers have played since 1901, calculates win, lose, draw, goals for, goals against, average goals per game, highest and lowest league position etc etc - yes, sad, I know...................
When you get to grips with Excel it has many unexpected uses.
Best Regards - Peter
I'd hate to be with you when you're on your own.
And of course spreadsheets are great for keeping track of the watch savings fund!
Sent from my H3113 using Tapatalk
I realise it's a total misuse of the programme (speaking as someone who once created a 55 tab interactive spreadsheet that detailed the connections on a large fibre patching frame) but I find it's also by far the quickest way to print any miscellaneous bit of text such as an address label. I find it much quicker than Word for instance.
If you want to open up excel: show the developer tab and start visual basic.
There's loads of help on google so try a userform first and then show a message box (msgbox) containing, I don't know, off the top of my head,
"hello world"
Then you'll be up and running with vba which is very, very powerful!
So if you have the following cells for amounts allocated to a project,
Current / Predicted / Final
How do you write that as a formula and yes I’m afraid I am a bit of a spanner with all this.
Best,
Ben
I’m trying to show if there is an underspend / overspend or if they are bang on the money.
Create a series (sequence of numbers) for the predicted/final spend. This will translate into a graph plot for the planned spend.
Then create a series for the actual spend over time. This can also be represented as a graph and you also have running costs against actuals in table from.
E.g if period 03 is final:
Period 01 02 03
Predicted 20 40 70
Actual 15 45 65
So is there a way of having the current column (A) applied to the predicted column (B) and end with the final column (C).
Or would it be better to have an extra column (D) which shows underspend / overspend if applicable.
Thanks, will make a copy of my current book and have a play around.
Mr Pointy, yes!