Re: [libreoffice-users] specify an absolute sheet address (SOLVED)

2021-06-14 Thread John Kaufmann
On 2021-06-14 20:25, Thomas Blasejewicz wrote: On 2021/06/13 2:55, Johnny Rosenberg wrote: Another way to get around it is to name your range. Then your formula could look something like =VLOOKUP(N76;ZipCodes;2;0) Named ranges are absolute, always. ... Defining the data range in the sheet "Zip

Re: [libreoffice-users] specify an absolute sheet address (SOLVED)

2021-06-14 Thread Thomas Blasejewicz
On 2021/06/13 2:55, Johnny Rosenberg wrote: Another way to get around it is to name your range. Then your formula could look something like =VLOOKUP(N76;ZipCodes;2;0) Named ranges are absolute, always. Kind regards Johnny Rosenberg After futile efforts to make all those symbols work

Re: [libreoffice-users] Start Date

2021-06-14 Thread Brian Barker
At 12:41 14/06/2021 +0200, Silvio Siefke wrote: I have a table like: 11.04.2022;service a;250 12.04.2022;service a;250 13.04.2022;service a;250 14.04.2022;service b;250 15.04.2022;service b;250 12.05.2022;service b;250 13.05.2022;service c;250 14.05.2022;service c;250 17.05.2022;service d;250

Re: [libreoffice-users] Start Date

2021-06-14 Thread Silvio Siefke
On Mon, 14 Jun 2021 19:25:15 +0100 Brian Barker wrote: > o I hope the date column contains genuine date values and not just > pieces of text that look like dates. had date format no text :) > PS: You are too late to start those service B processes! > > I trust this helps. It had worked out

Re: [libreoffice-users] Updating Data in Calc

2021-06-14 Thread Hylton Conacher (ZR1HPC)
Dear Brian, On 2021/06/13 18:52, Brian Barker wrote: At 15:01 13/06/2021 +0200, Hylton Conacher wrote: A simple sum will do it i.e.: In cell Y4 insert [...] =SUM(M18-$W$4) I'm often puzzled by suggestions such as this. In what way do you think that =SUM(Xm-Yn) differs from =Xm-Yn? The minus

Re: [libreoffice-users] Start Date

2021-06-14 Thread Wade Smart
To get the number of work days: =workday(end date; -25) https://wiki.openoffice.org/wiki/Documentation/How_Tos/Calc:_WORKDAY_function And assuming each service gets a different date: =workday(end date; -service B) You can do a lookup table for each service. -- Registered Linux User: #480675

Re: [libreoffice-users] Start Date

2021-06-14 Thread Silvio Siefke
On Mon, 14 Jun 2021 05:58:54 -0500 Wade Smart wrote: > Question: does the meter per day have any relevance to the date? > Is a working day equal to a business day? -> Mon - Fri only? Yes the meters per day mean what is the daily output. Different services with different daily output. > >

Re: [libreoffice-users] Start Date

2021-06-14 Thread Wade Smart
Question: does the meter per day have any relevance to the date? Is a working day equal to a business day? -> Mon - Fri only? -- Registered Linux User: #480675 Registered Linux Machine: #408606 Linux since June 2005 On Mon, Jun 14, 2021 at 5:44 AM Silvio Siefke wrote: > > Hello, > > I have a

[libreoffice-users] Start Date

2021-06-14 Thread Silvio Siefke
Hello, I have a table like: 11.04.2022;service a;250 12.04.2022;service a;250 13.04.2022;service a;250 14.04.2022;service b;250 15.04.2022;service b;250 12.05.2022;service b;250 13.05.2022;service c;250 14.05.2022;service c;250 17.05.2022;service d;250 18.05.2022;service d;250 Service a need