Identifying the top five values in multiple groups

R

RobFJ

I've got a spreadsheet of pay information for about eight hundred people.
Each person is on one of eight salary scales

I'd like to create a new worksheet that shows the details of just the 5
highest paid people in each scale (name, dept, salary, etc.) - and also the
five lowest. Ideally, I'd like also to be able to vary that number - eg the
top ten, the highest, etc..

Can someone help?

Thanks
 
J

Jacob Skaria

Suppose you have data in Sheet1 in the below format

Col A Col B Col C
Name Scale Salary
a1 1 101
a2 1 102
a3 1 103
a4 2 104


In Sheet2 cell A1 enter the scale
In Sheet2 cell B1 enter the number of items to be displayed

In cell A2 apply the below array formula and copy down to 10 cells
=IF($B$1>=ROW(A1),LARGE(IF(Sheet1!$B$1:$B$100=$A$1,
Sheet1!$C$1:$C$100),ROW(A1)),"")

Please note that this is an array formula. You create array formulas in the
same way that you create other formulas, except you press CTRL+SHIFT+ENTER to
enter the formula. If successful in 'Formula Bar' you can notice the curly
braces at both ends like "{=<formula>}"


In cell B2 apply the below formula and copy/drag to 10 cells
=IF(A2<>"",INDEX(Sheet1!A:A,MATCH(A2,Sheet1!C:C,0)),"")

For other columns change the column in the second formula (INDEX() ) to suit.
 
R

RobFJ

Thanks Jacob,

I've tried the suggested formulae and they work as long as everything is
unique values. If there are two values the same, then the index formula
seems to repeat the first value it comes across.

Is there a way around that?

Regards,
 
G

Glenn

RobFJ said:
I've got a spreadsheet of pay information for about eight hundred
people. Each person is on one of eight salary scales

I'd like to create a new worksheet that shows the details of just the 5
highest paid people in each scale (name, dept, salary, etc.) - and also
the five lowest. Ideally, I'd like also to be able to vary that number -
eg the top ten, the highest, etc..

Can someone help?

Thanks




Try a PivotTable. If you aren't familiar with them, look here:

http://peltiertech.com/Excel/Pivots/pivotstart.htm
 

Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments. After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.

Ask a Question

Top