P
Paul
I've read up on array formulas on the web, and experimented with
multiplying vector array constant with different lengths and
orientations. Regardless of the order in which they appear in the
expression, if a M-tall array constant is multiplied with a N-wide
array constant, the result is an M-tall, N-wide matrix. The result at
the mth row and nth column is the product of the mth element from the
tall vector and the nth element from the wide vector. How universal
is this? Can this be relied upon to hold in all situations? I got
the vertical vectors using TRANSPOSE().
Things get complicated if I multiply 2-D array constants of differing
dimensions. Does anyone know the rules for this? Does it actually do
anything useful enough to be exploited?
Finally, I noticed that one can specify a target area for the array
multiplication that differs in size from the resulting matrix. If it
is too small along a certain dimension, the matrix simply gets
truncated along that direction. If it is too big, the extra cells are
filled with #N/A. Is there a way to show the boundary of cells over
which an array formula is specified?
Thanks.
multiplying vector array constant with different lengths and
orientations. Regardless of the order in which they appear in the
expression, if a M-tall array constant is multiplied with a N-wide
array constant, the result is an M-tall, N-wide matrix. The result at
the mth row and nth column is the product of the mth element from the
tall vector and the nth element from the wide vector. How universal
is this? Can this be relied upon to hold in all situations? I got
the vertical vectors using TRANSPOSE().
Things get complicated if I multiply 2-D array constants of differing
dimensions. Does anyone know the rules for this? Does it actually do
anything useful enough to be exploited?
Finally, I noticed that one can specify a target area for the array
multiplication that differs in size from the resulting matrix. If it
is too small along a certain dimension, the matrix simply gets
truncated along that direction. If it is too big, the extra cells are
filled with #N/A. Is there a way to show the boundary of cells over
which an array formula is specified?
Thanks.