I wish to construct Auction Lists for my Philatelic Society. At present I make the list up in an Acces DB and then transfer it to Excel (2003). At this point I add extra columns to cater for "Bidders #'s"; "Selling price"; "Price to Buyer";"Return to Vendor"; & "Return to Club", complete with relevant formulae. So far so good, I now wish to add, at the base of these columns, via a macro initially, a summary of data as entered. I also want to show, and use, in order to locate this data, the "TOTAL NUMBER OF LOTS". Simple, just count the "Lot #" column, no joy at all, and there doesn't appear to be an answer in the HELP files. Has any body any ideas. I could I suppose enter this number from the Access Database but would like to make it fully self-supporting.
Dave
=COUNTA(range) will return a count of all non-blank cells in the range.
=COUNT(range) will return just the numerical cells in the range.
Gord Dibben Excel MVP
On Thu, 24 Nov 2005 08:17:09 -0800, "Dave Hacker" <Dave
I wish to construct Auction Lists for my Philatelic Society. At present I make the list up in an Acces DB and then transfer it to Excel (2003). At this point I add extra columns to cater for "Bidders #'s"; "Selling price"; "Price to Buyer";"Return to Vendor"; & "Return to Club", complete with relevant formulae. So far so good, I now wish to add, at the base of these columns, via a macro initially, a summary of data as entered. I also want to show, and use, in order to locate this data, the "TOTAL NUMBER OF LOTS". Simple, just count the "Lot #" column, no joy at all, and there doesn't appear to be an answer in the HELP files. Has any body any ideas. I could I suppose enter this number from the Access Database but would like to make it fully self-supporting.
Gord: The point is that theoretically I do not know the range. Is there a way I can return the first blank row number as a result, this could then be manipulated
Dave
=COUNTA(range) will return a count of all non-blank cells in the range.
=COUNT(range) will return just the numerical cells in the range.
Gord Dibben Excel MVP
On Thu, 24 Nov 2005 08:17:09 -0800, "Dave Hacker" <Dave
I wish to construct Auction Lists for my Philatelic Society. At present I make the list up in an Acces DB and then transfer it to Excel (2003). At this point I add extra columns to cater for "Bidders #'s"; "Selling price"; "Price to Buyer";"Return to Vendor"; & "Return to Club", complete with relevant formulae. So far so good, I now wish to add, at the base of these columns, via a macro initially, a summary of data as entered. I also want to show, and use, in order to locate this data, the "TOTAL NUMBER OF LOTS". Simple, just count the "Lot #" column, no joy at all, and there doesn't appear to be an answer in the HELP files. Has any body any ideas. I could I suppose enter this number from the Access Database but would like to make it fully self-supporting.
Dave,
As you have only one group of data, you can use a whole column as the range, since COUNTA counts non-blank cells, like so =COUNTA(A:A). It might be 1 or 2 too many for headings , if so just subtract that number in the formula.
--
HTH
RP (remove nothere from the email address if mailing direct)
Gord: The point is that theoretically I do not know the range. Is there a way I can return the first blank row number as a result, this could then be manipulated
Dave
=COUNTA(range) will return a count of all non-blank cells in the range.
=COUNT(range) will return just the numerical cells in the range.
Gord Dibben Excel MVP
On Thu, 24 Nov 2005 08:17:09 -0800, "Dave Hacker" <Dave
I wish to construct Auction Lists for my Philatelic Society. At present I make the list up in an Acces DB and then transfer it to Excel (2003). At this point I add extra columns to cater for "Bidders #'s"; "Selling price"; "Price to Buyer";"Return to Vendor"; & "Return to Club", complete with relevant formulae. So far so good, I now wish to add, at the base of these columns, via a macro initially, a summary of data as entered. I also want to show, and use, in order to locate this data, the "TOTAL NUMBER OF LOTS". Simple, just count the "Lot #" column, no joy at all, and there doesn't appear to be an answer in the HELP files. Has any body any ideas. I could I suppose enter this number from the Access Database but would like to make it fully self-supporting.