My LOOKUP function does not always return matching values, help !!
Lost of times I work with Excel to make statistics, build nice operational Exchange dashboards, and I make a very intensive usage of LOOKUP and VLOOKUP. Since I recently lost valuable time trying to figure why a LOOKUP would not return me the values I want, or sometimes it did, sometimes it didn’t, I finally found the workaround for this.
This post is mostly for me to remember the trick but it’s good to know for you guys as well if you are like me an Excel-man (ish):
This post is merely a pure copy (commented) from the following article:
https://support.microsoft.com/kb/181212
“LOOKUP requires that the first column of the vector (or the first column or row for the array form) is sorted in ascending order. The following information describes different formulas that you can use to return the same information returned by LOOKUP without requiring that the first column of the table be sorted. “
==> because I was not aware of the above until I searched the Internet (using www.bing.com I have to say it), I lost about 2 hours trying to figure what was wrong in my spreadsheet ! I was thinking “Chier, qu’est-ce que c’est encore que ce truc de daube ???” which the Parisian French for “what is wrong with my data ???”
(Private message to my friends Joe T. and Liju V.: we don’t say “sacrebleu” anymore in France since the XVIIth century, you have to learn the expression above instead :-) )
Then I found the above article, which saved my spreadsheet. Pewwww, it’s not a bug, it’s just the way the LOOKUP function works !! I was just ignorant.
I could have used VLOOKUP, but VLOOKUP does a lookup on the first column only. so if you wish to match the data on something in a column of your table that is not in the first column, and you don’t want to rearrange your original table against which you are searching, that’s when you’d use the formula in mentionned this article.
I found the “INDEX+MATCH” combination the most useful and the most practical to use in my case, so I paste this part in this post. For the other possibilities, just open the support article above (181212)
Using INDEX and MATCH
The following formula returns the same information that a LOOKUP returns without requiring the first column of the table to be sorted:
=INDEX(Table_Array,MATCH(Lookup_Value,Lookup_Array,0),Col_Index_Num)
Where:
Table_Array = The entire lookup table.<br> Lookup_Value = The value to be found in the first column of<br> "table_array".<br> Lookup_Array = The range of cells containing possible<br> lookup values.<br> Col_Index_Num = The column number in "table_array" for which<br> the matching value should be returned.
Comments
- Anonymous
February 13, 2016
Hi Sam,Few days back I also faced the same problem, but rearranging the data was not a solution for me.At last I came across an article on Negative Vlookup and it worked like a charm.Here is the reference to the article: http://www.exceltrick.com/formulas_macros/vlookup-in-excel/#Negative-VLOOKUPHope others would find it useful too.Thanks!