Can somebody say what is wrong with my nested IF function for excel?











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I have the following function:



=IF(B4<5, "Excellent", IF(OR(B4>5, B4<7), "Good", IF(B4>=7, "Satisfactory")))



I want to to give excellent if the cell value is less than 5%, given Good if it is between 5 and 7 percent and give satisfactory if the cell value is bigger than 7 %.



The cell values (B4) that the function refers to, is in percentages. does anybody see what is wrong?










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    up vote
    0
    down vote

    favorite












    I have the following function:



    =IF(B4<5, "Excellent", IF(OR(B4>5, B4<7), "Good", IF(B4>=7, "Satisfactory")))



    I want to to give excellent if the cell value is less than 5%, given Good if it is between 5 and 7 percent and give satisfactory if the cell value is bigger than 7 %.



    The cell values (B4) that the function refers to, is in percentages. does anybody see what is wrong?










    share|improve this question
























      up vote
      0
      down vote

      favorite









      up vote
      0
      down vote

      favorite











      I have the following function:



      =IF(B4<5, "Excellent", IF(OR(B4>5, B4<7), "Good", IF(B4>=7, "Satisfactory")))



      I want to to give excellent if the cell value is less than 5%, given Good if it is between 5 and 7 percent and give satisfactory if the cell value is bigger than 7 %.



      The cell values (B4) that the function refers to, is in percentages. does anybody see what is wrong?










      share|improve this question













      I have the following function:



      =IF(B4<5, "Excellent", IF(OR(B4>5, B4<7), "Good", IF(B4>=7, "Satisfactory")))



      I want to to give excellent if the cell value is less than 5%, given Good if it is between 5 and 7 percent and give satisfactory if the cell value is bigger than 7 %.



      The cell values (B4) that the function refers to, is in percentages. does anybody see what is wrong?







      microsoft-excel






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      asked Dec 5 at 19:25









      jermieje

      31




      31






















          2 Answers
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          up vote
          2
          down vote



          accepted










          Displaying as % is formatting; the value is stored as the actual (decimal) value, not the whole number of percent. To test for <5%, use <.05, etc.



          BTW, if you want to test for a value between 5% and 7%, use AND instead of OR. OR will be true for, say, 3% because that is <7%, or 8% because that's more than 5%.



          Also, you will have holes in your ranges if you test for only < and >; you need to provide for when the values are exactly equal. Figure out whether you want <= vs. >, or < vs. >=.



          You can also save an IF. Your first two IFs test for everything <.07, so the false condition will be >=.07. The general form for IF is IF(condition, true result, false result). So your formula would look like this:



          =IF(B4<.05, "Excellent", IF(AND(B4>=.05, B4<=.07), "Good", "Satisfactory"))





          share|improve this answer






























            up vote
            0
            down vote













            As percentage form are between 0 and 1,You should rewrite if function like B4<0.05 ...
            It should be like this:
            =IF(B4<0.05, "Excellent", IF(OR(B4>0.05, B4<0.07), "Good", IF(B4>=0.07, "Satisfactory")))



            As I see your IF function, you forgot to define 5% in your function






            share|improve this answer





















            • Welcome to Super User. Two thoughts on your answer. One is that it misses some obvious errors in the OP's formula. The other is that the intention is for each answer to provide a solution that hasn't already been contributed. This one duplicates what is already in the other answer. But do continue to participate; and thanks for taking the time to try to help on this question.
              – fixer1234
              Dec 5 at 19:55











            Your Answer








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            2 Answers
            2






            active

            oldest

            votes








            2 Answers
            2






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes








            up vote
            2
            down vote



            accepted










            Displaying as % is formatting; the value is stored as the actual (decimal) value, not the whole number of percent. To test for <5%, use <.05, etc.



            BTW, if you want to test for a value between 5% and 7%, use AND instead of OR. OR will be true for, say, 3% because that is <7%, or 8% because that's more than 5%.



            Also, you will have holes in your ranges if you test for only < and >; you need to provide for when the values are exactly equal. Figure out whether you want <= vs. >, or < vs. >=.



            You can also save an IF. Your first two IFs test for everything <.07, so the false condition will be >=.07. The general form for IF is IF(condition, true result, false result). So your formula would look like this:



            =IF(B4<.05, "Excellent", IF(AND(B4>=.05, B4<=.07), "Good", "Satisfactory"))





            share|improve this answer



























              up vote
              2
              down vote



              accepted










              Displaying as % is formatting; the value is stored as the actual (decimal) value, not the whole number of percent. To test for <5%, use <.05, etc.



              BTW, if you want to test for a value between 5% and 7%, use AND instead of OR. OR will be true for, say, 3% because that is <7%, or 8% because that's more than 5%.



              Also, you will have holes in your ranges if you test for only < and >; you need to provide for when the values are exactly equal. Figure out whether you want <= vs. >, or < vs. >=.



              You can also save an IF. Your first two IFs test for everything <.07, so the false condition will be >=.07. The general form for IF is IF(condition, true result, false result). So your formula would look like this:



              =IF(B4<.05, "Excellent", IF(AND(B4>=.05, B4<=.07), "Good", "Satisfactory"))





              share|improve this answer

























                up vote
                2
                down vote



                accepted







                up vote
                2
                down vote



                accepted






                Displaying as % is formatting; the value is stored as the actual (decimal) value, not the whole number of percent. To test for <5%, use <.05, etc.



                BTW, if you want to test for a value between 5% and 7%, use AND instead of OR. OR will be true for, say, 3% because that is <7%, or 8% because that's more than 5%.



                Also, you will have holes in your ranges if you test for only < and >; you need to provide for when the values are exactly equal. Figure out whether you want <= vs. >, or < vs. >=.



                You can also save an IF. Your first two IFs test for everything <.07, so the false condition will be >=.07. The general form for IF is IF(condition, true result, false result). So your formula would look like this:



                =IF(B4<.05, "Excellent", IF(AND(B4>=.05, B4<=.07), "Good", "Satisfactory"))





                share|improve this answer














                Displaying as % is formatting; the value is stored as the actual (decimal) value, not the whole number of percent. To test for <5%, use <.05, etc.



                BTW, if you want to test for a value between 5% and 7%, use AND instead of OR. OR will be true for, say, 3% because that is <7%, or 8% because that's more than 5%.



                Also, you will have holes in your ranges if you test for only < and >; you need to provide for when the values are exactly equal. Figure out whether you want <= vs. >, or < vs. >=.



                You can also save an IF. Your first two IFs test for everything <.07, so the false condition will be >=.07. The general form for IF is IF(condition, true result, false result). So your formula would look like this:



                =IF(B4<.05, "Excellent", IF(AND(B4>=.05, B4<=.07), "Good", "Satisfactory"))






                share|improve this answer














                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer








                edited Dec 5 at 19:58

























                answered Dec 5 at 19:32









                fixer1234

                17.7k144581




                17.7k144581
























                    up vote
                    0
                    down vote













                    As percentage form are between 0 and 1,You should rewrite if function like B4<0.05 ...
                    It should be like this:
                    =IF(B4<0.05, "Excellent", IF(OR(B4>0.05, B4<0.07), "Good", IF(B4>=0.07, "Satisfactory")))



                    As I see your IF function, you forgot to define 5% in your function






                    share|improve this answer





















                    • Welcome to Super User. Two thoughts on your answer. One is that it misses some obvious errors in the OP's formula. The other is that the intention is for each answer to provide a solution that hasn't already been contributed. This one duplicates what is already in the other answer. But do continue to participate; and thanks for taking the time to try to help on this question.
                      – fixer1234
                      Dec 5 at 19:55















                    up vote
                    0
                    down vote













                    As percentage form are between 0 and 1,You should rewrite if function like B4<0.05 ...
                    It should be like this:
                    =IF(B4<0.05, "Excellent", IF(OR(B4>0.05, B4<0.07), "Good", IF(B4>=0.07, "Satisfactory")))



                    As I see your IF function, you forgot to define 5% in your function






                    share|improve this answer





















                    • Welcome to Super User. Two thoughts on your answer. One is that it misses some obvious errors in the OP's formula. The other is that the intention is for each answer to provide a solution that hasn't already been contributed. This one duplicates what is already in the other answer. But do continue to participate; and thanks for taking the time to try to help on this question.
                      – fixer1234
                      Dec 5 at 19:55













                    up vote
                    0
                    down vote










                    up vote
                    0
                    down vote









                    As percentage form are between 0 and 1,You should rewrite if function like B4<0.05 ...
                    It should be like this:
                    =IF(B4<0.05, "Excellent", IF(OR(B4>0.05, B4<0.07), "Good", IF(B4>=0.07, "Satisfactory")))



                    As I see your IF function, you forgot to define 5% in your function






                    share|improve this answer












                    As percentage form are between 0 and 1,You should rewrite if function like B4<0.05 ...
                    It should be like this:
                    =IF(B4<0.05, "Excellent", IF(OR(B4>0.05, B4<0.07), "Good", IF(B4>=0.07, "Satisfactory")))



                    As I see your IF function, you forgot to define 5% in your function







                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered Dec 5 at 19:44









                    Nihan J. Portman

                    1




                    1












                    • Welcome to Super User. Two thoughts on your answer. One is that it misses some obvious errors in the OP's formula. The other is that the intention is for each answer to provide a solution that hasn't already been contributed. This one duplicates what is already in the other answer. But do continue to participate; and thanks for taking the time to try to help on this question.
                      – fixer1234
                      Dec 5 at 19:55


















                    • Welcome to Super User. Two thoughts on your answer. One is that it misses some obvious errors in the OP's formula. The other is that the intention is for each answer to provide a solution that hasn't already been contributed. This one duplicates what is already in the other answer. But do continue to participate; and thanks for taking the time to try to help on this question.
                      – fixer1234
                      Dec 5 at 19:55
















                    Welcome to Super User. Two thoughts on your answer. One is that it misses some obvious errors in the OP's formula. The other is that the intention is for each answer to provide a solution that hasn't already been contributed. This one duplicates what is already in the other answer. But do continue to participate; and thanks for taking the time to try to help on this question.
                    – fixer1234
                    Dec 5 at 19:55




                    Welcome to Super User. Two thoughts on your answer. One is that it misses some obvious errors in the OP's formula. The other is that the intention is for each answer to provide a solution that hasn't already been contributed. This one duplicates what is already in the other answer. But do continue to participate; and thanks for taking the time to try to help on this question.
                    – fixer1234
                    Dec 5 at 19:55


















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