bloggingjedi
New Member
Hi
James here, this is my first post. Its been a few years since i have used ms excel, but i'm wanting to help a friend sort out his past dues.
My mate is a mechanic, he has last years worth of work that he did for his clients, one excel sheet per client. He wants to setup a master sheet that will look at all his files so that he can filter the information he needs.
I've used the ~if command so that it looks at file01.xlsx takes from Surname A2 field and shows it in the master file, file01 to file100 would be 100 clients. What i dont want to do is for him to have to write in every column the file name he has, just to put the file name in colum A$1$ down to 100 so that column b c d e f and g will pull in
that name that he has inputted there.
='[test1.xlsx]Office Input'!$B$6 is the formula
i tried ='[=A1]Office Input'!$B$6
As i said its been a few years since i played around with all of this, im working through a few dvds to relearn it all again.
ANY help appreciated.
James
James here, this is my first post. Its been a few years since i have used ms excel, but i'm wanting to help a friend sort out his past dues.
My mate is a mechanic, he has last years worth of work that he did for his clients, one excel sheet per client. He wants to setup a master sheet that will look at all his files so that he can filter the information he needs.
I've used the ~if command so that it looks at file01.xlsx takes from Surname A2 field and shows it in the master file, file01 to file100 would be 100 clients. What i dont want to do is for him to have to write in every column the file name he has, just to put the file name in colum A$1$ down to 100 so that column b c d e f and g will pull in
that name that he has inputted there.
='[test1.xlsx]Office Input'!$B$6 is the formula
i tried ='[=A1]Office Input'!$B$6
As i said its been a few years since i played around with all of this, im working through a few dvds to relearn it all again.
ANY help appreciated.
James