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Hi,
To answer your question about the CONCATENATE("<>","Y"), I am looking
for something that is not explicitly marked as reconciled (not "Y").
This test will mark as not reconciled all entries having an "N" (or
anything else for that matter) and all blank entries (a blank cell
obviously not being equal to "Y"), which is a more robust test than
looking only for cells that are qual to "N".
For the rest, I think you have a good understanding of what the formula
is doing.
I hope this helps.
Rémy.
.Le jeudi 15 novembre 2018 à 21:35 +0200, Hylton Conacher (ZR1HPC) a
écrit :
Hi Remy,

On 2018/11/13 01:22, remygauthier wrote:
Hi,
Unclaimed_slips.ods
<http://document-foundation-mail-archive.969070.n3.nabble.com/file/
t489793/Unclaimed_slips.ods>
I went back to the original post and downloaded the file you had
uploaded to
Google Drive. I made what I think were the correct mods and the
results on
the Summary sheet are consistent with what has been entered. I have
attached
the modified file, so you should be able to download it and have a
look (you
will probably need to access the post via the nabble site -
nabble.documentfoundation.org/). Once we know what is wrong with
the
changes, it should be easier to provide information.

I hope this helps.

I have reviewed your file on Nabble and after reviewing and
inserting 
the formula into the current file, am pleased to announce that the
issue 
is SOLVED! :)

THANKYOU

Looking at the formula 
<=SUMIFS(Data.C$3:Data.C$1000,Data.$A$3:Data.$A$1000,CONCATENATE("=",
$A3 
,"*"),Data.$F$3:Data.$F$1000,CONCATENATE("<>","Y"))>, I see how the 
Concatenate was used almost like an IF statement criteria, and could
be 
stated as 'CONCATENATE("=",Summary.$A3 ,"*")'. However I do not 
understand the second CONCATENATE as I am looking for those with an
"N" 
i.e. ones that have not been reconciled yet the SUMIFS yields the 
correct value?

Concatenate joins/amalgamates values from different cells or text
i.e. 
as a Linux command $>cat filename would display the contents of the 
filename. My understanding is that a similar command of $>cat bee
hive 
would result in the word beehive being displayed.

In the formula you state to SUM values in Data.c3:Data.c1000 if date 
value of column A equals a partial match of the actual Data column 
holding the date AND where the value is blank or Y, despite you only 
wanting to SUM the N values?

Basically the formula works and I am not complaining and very
grateful 
but I would like to better understand the formula, so that I can use
it 
in future.

I hope my explanation is sufficient.

Regards
Hylton

P.S.: To ALL owners of a Debit or Credit Card, establish a
spreadsheet 
using the above formula, enter your transactions on the Data tab, 
reconcile them according to your bank statement and see what value
of 
goods you are getting for FREE as sometimes it pays to shop at
certain 
retailers, even if it is only occasional.

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