XL97: Natural Language Formula Returns Incorrect ResultsLast reviewed: January 9, 1998Article ID: Q170455 |
The information in this article applies to:
SYMPTOMSWhen you calculate a formula by using a column or row label as a reference in a natural language formula, the formula returns a total that is incorrect.
CAUSEThis problem occurs when the following conditions are true:
STATUSThis behavior is by design of Microsoft Excel 97.
MORE INFORMATIONNatural language formulas determine the label you reference by first searching to the left, and then searching above the formula you entered. Although a merged cell may appear to encompass many cells, the address of the merged cell is actually the address of the upper-left cell in the merged cell range. The natural language formula uses this upper-left cell as the row or column base for calculations. The following example contains stacked labels in cells B1 and B2. Each of these cells is merged into column C.
A1: B1: Sales A2: B2: 1996 A3: B3: Jan C3: Feb A4: Bill B4: 100 C4: 110 A5: Steve B5: 105 C5: 100The following formula returns the value 100:
=Sum(Sales '1996' Jan:Feb Bill)Because the labels in B1 and B2 are stacked and merged into column C, the natural language formula references the labels in column B and adds only cell B4. However, you might expect that the data in cells B4 and C4 would be added because the formula refers to labels for both Jan and Feb. For additional information about natural language formulas, please see the following article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
Article-ID: Q161881 TITLE : XL97: How to Use Natural Language Formulas REFERENCESFor more information about natural language formulas, click the Index tab in Help, type the following text
labels, in formulasand then double-click the selected text to go to the "Learn about labels and names in formulas" topic.
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Additional query words: NLF
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