Hi all
On Fri, Nov 16, 2012 at 4:16 PM, Michael Brand
wrote:
> [...]
>A nice solution for variant 2 would be if
>@2$3..@2$7 = remote(A, @>>$$#) :: @3$3..@3$7 = remote(B, @>>$$#)
>could be simplified to
>@2$3..@3$7 = remote($8, @>>$$#)
> [...]
Because I need the above indirection
Dear Eric,
I was sure something like that could be done. Thank for the example.
Being a layman (not a programmer) I will need a time study it.
Sincerely,
Martin
On Wed, Nov 21, 2012 at 06:01:20PM +0100, Martin Gross wrote:
> Dear Michael
>
> > if it’s just summing up disjoint sets hierarchically you might ...
>
> Thank you very much again for your efforts. Unfortunately this would
> not solve my problem neither. On the one hand my tables are on
> diffe
Dear Michael
> if it’s just summing up disjoint sets hierarchically you might ...
Thank you very much again for your efforts. Unfortunately this would
not solve my problem neither. On the one hand my tables are on
different entry levels (*, **, ***, etc.) and on the other I am afraid
I need a m
Martin Gross writes:
> Dear Michael,
>
> thank you very much, this is what I was looking for. I myself
> supposed the answer should be related to "remote references", but was
> not sure how to use them.
>
> Just one point is not yet optimum to me: I do not have just 2 tables,
> but hundreds. It
Hi Martin
On Mon, Nov 19, 2012 at 12:54 PM, Martin Gross wrote:
> Just one point is not yet optimum to me: I do not have just 2 tables,
> but hundreds. It would be hard and not very clean to add them all one
> by one. Do you know if it there is a better way to reference remote
> tables? For ex
Dear Michael,
thank you very much, this is what I was looking for. I myself
supposed the answer should be related to "remote references", but was
not sure how to use them.
Just one point is not yet optimum to me: I do not have just 2 tables,
but hundreds. It would be hard and not very clean to
Hi Martin
On Fri, Nov 16, 2012 at 12:33 PM, Martin Gross wrote:
> Now I would like to get some statistics that consider all institutions
> together. For example summing up the "variable" TAE from all the
> tables in the file to get the very total cost of outgoings.
Below are two approaches to a
Dear helpers,
I have a big file where I enter incomings and outgoings of book
exchanges with different institutions:
* Institution A
| | In | # | € | Out | # | € |
|---+-++-+-++-|
| | Title P | 1 | 45 | Title A | 1 | 15 |
| |