Stuck! Please help

J

Jeff

I have inherited a HUGE spreadsheet that probably needs to be converted to an
Access Database.

However, I have been tasked with making the info retrievable in its present
format.

Please give me suggestion for the following scenario:


10 columns/labels: Employee, Name, location, id#, Rating, etc.

2500 rows or records.

I would like to enter the employee name on a separated spreadsheet, and have
all of that employee’s records, or rows, displayed.

Thank you!!

Jeff
 
P

Pete_UK

Are you implying that you might have more than one record for an
employee? Is the ID# unique - it would be better to use this rather
than name to specify who you want to find.

Pete
 
M

Mike H

Jeff

Your data on sheet 1 colmna A - J

Enter a name in a1 of sheet 2
Put this in b1 of sheet 2 and drag right 9 columns

=VLOOKUP($A$1,Sheet1!$A$1:$J$2500,COLUMN(B1))

Mike
 
D

Dave Peterson

And since the OP is matching on a name, I would think that he would want an
exact match.

=IF($A$1="","",VLOOKUP($A$1,Sheet1!$A$1:$J$118,COLUMN(B1),False))
 
J

Jeff

Rock on!

U DA MAN!


Would you agree, however, that ACCESS would be a better choice for this?
 
P

Pete_UK

Thanks for the feedback, Jeff.

You described it as a HUGE database, but Excel comfortably handles
2,500 records - versions before XL2007 could manage 65,536 records in
each sheet - so why complicate it by using Access?

Pete
 
J

Jeff

Not sure....but couldn't I then pull up records with multiple criteria easy?

For example, I want to pull up all "excellent" reviews in "Deparment"
Maintenance between "dates" of 1-1-04 & 1-1-07?
--
Jeff


Pete_UK said:
Thanks for the feedback, Jeff.

You described it as a HUGE database, but Excel comfortably handles
2,500 records - versions before XL2007 could manage 65,536 records in
each sheet - so why complicate it by using Access?

Pete
 
P

Pete_UK

Well, you can do that in Excel if you apply filters to the Department
and Date columns (interactively), whereas in Access you would have to
write a report to do the same thing (but then it would be there
forever, and you could re-run it).

You can also use Advanced Filter in Excel for more complex
relationships, and set up formulae using SUBTOTAL, SUMIF, COUNTIF and
SUMPRODUCT for summary counts and totals.

I analyse telephone call records for my clients each month. Some of
these have 40,000 to 50,000 records, but I can manage quite well using
Excel to produce various tables and graphs automatically - I just copy/
paste the new data in each month and then I have my reports on
separate sheets.

It all depends on what you are happier using - I'm an Excel man,
myself.

Pete
 
J

Jeff

I agree completely! I prefer Excel.

My challenge is that another user (very limited experience) is the person
who needs to access the data on a regular basis.
 

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