Kaip suvynioti duomenis į kelis „Excel“ stulpelius - „Excel“ patarimai

Gwynne turi 15 tūkstančių duomenų eilučių trijuose stulpeliuose. Ji norėtų, kad duomenys būtų spausdinami su 6 stulpeliais viename puslapyje. Pavyzdžiui, pirmi 50 pavadinimų A2: C51, tada kiti 50 pavadinimų E2: G51. Tada perkelkite trečiąsias 50 eilučių į A52: C101 ir pan.

Užuot tai išsprendęs formulėmis, naudosiu šiek tiek „Excel VBA“ duomenims pertvarkyti.

VBA makrokomanda paliks duomenis A: C. Tuščias stulpelis pasirodys D. Nauji duomenys bus rodomi D: F, tuščias stulpelis G, nauji duomenys H: J.

Pastaba

Beveik prieš 10 metų aš atsakiau į klausimą, kaip 1 ir 6 stulpelius užklupti. Duomenys buvo išdėstyti horizontaliai: „Apple“ C1, bananas D1, vyšnia E1,… pav. H1, tada gvajava prasidėjo C2 ir pan. Tada aš atsakiau į klausimą naudodamas formules. Galite žiūrėti tą seną vaizdo įrašą: čia.

Pirmiausia reikia išsiaiškinti, kiek eilučių telpa jūsų atspausdintame puslapyje. Nepraleiskite šio veiksmo. Prieš pradėdami naudoti makrokomandą, turite atlikti visus šiuos veiksmus:

  • Nustatykite paraštes juostos skirtuke Puslapio išdėstymas
  • Jei norite, kad 1 eilutės antraštės pasikartotų kiekviename puslapyje, naudokite Puslapio išdėstymas, Viršuje kartojamos eilutės ir nurodykite 1: 1
  • Nurodykite visas antraštes ir poraštes, kurios bus rodomos kiekviename puslapyje.
  • Nukopijuokite antraštes iš A1: C1 į E1: G1.
  • Nukopijuokite antraštes iš A1: C1 į I1: K1.
  • Kaip spausdinimo sritį nurodykite E: K
  • E2: E101 įrašykite skaičius nuo 1 iki 100 =ROW()-1
Nustatykite spausdintiną puslapį.

Kai visi jūsų puslapio nustatymai bus teisingi, naudokite „Ctrl“ + P, kad būtų parodytas spausdinimo peržiūros dokumentas. Jei reikia, ekrano viduryje spustelėkite plytelę Rodyti spausdinimo peržiūrą. Spausdinimo peržiūroje raskite paskutinės eilutės numerį 1 puslapyje. Mano atveju tai yra 46. Tai bus svarbus skaičius ateityje.

Rodyti dokumentą Spausdinimo peržiūra.

Norėdami sukurti makrokomandą, atlikite šiuos veiksmus:

  1. Išsaugokite darbaknygę kaip naują pavadinimą, jei kas nors nepavyktų. Pvz .: „MyWorkbookTestCopy.xlsx“
  2. Paspauskite alt = "" + F11, kad atidarytumėte VBA redaktorių
  3. Meniu VBA pasirinkite Įterpti, Modulis
  4. Nukopijuokite šį kodą ir įklijuokite į kodo langą

    Sub WrapThem() ' the following line says XLUP not x1up ! FinalRow = Cells(Rows.Count, 1).End(xlUp).Row ' Change 46 to match your Rows Per Page RowsPerPage = 46 NextRow = 2 NextCol = 5 For i = 2 To FinalRow Step RowsPerPage Cells(NextRow, NextCol).Resize(RowsPerPage, 3).Value = _ Cells(i, 1).Resize(RowsPerPage, 3).Value If NextCol = 5 Then NextCol = 9 Else NextCol = 5 NextRow = NextRow + RowsPerPage End If Next i End Sub
  5. Suraskite eilutę, kurioje sakoma, RowsPerPage = 46ir 46 pakeiskite eilučių skaičiumi, kurį radote spausdinimo peržiūroje.

Štai keletas kitų dalykų, kuriuos gali tekti pakeisti atsižvelgiant į jūsų duomenis:

Į FinalRow =linija ieško paskutinio įrašo iš 1 skiltyje Jei jūsų duomenys prasidėjo C, o A skiltis, norėtumėte pakeisti taip:

FinalRow = Cells(Rows.Count, 1).End(xlUp).Row

šiam

FinalRow = Cells(Rows.Count, 3).End(xlUp).Row

Šiame pavyzdyje pirmoji naujų duomenų vieta bus langelis E2. Tai yra 2 eilutės 5 stulpelis. Jei turite penkias pavadinimų eilutes ir nauji duomenys bus pradėti naudoti G6, pakeistumėte NextRow = 2į NextRow = 6. Pakeiskite NextCol = 5į NextCol = 7(nes G stulpelis yra 7-asis stulpelis).

Šiame pavyzdyje duomenys prasideda A2 (iškart po antraštėmis 1 eilutėje). Jei turite 3 antraščių eilutes, jūsų duomenys prasidėtų A4 formatu. Keisti šią eilutę:

For i = 2 To FinalRow Step RowsPerPage

prie šios eilutės:

For i = 4 To FinalRow Step RowsPerPage

Mano išvesties stulpeliai rodomi E stulpelyje (5 stulpelis) ir I stulpelyje (9 stulpelis). Tarkime, kad turite keturis duomenų stulpelius. Originalūs duomenys yra B: E. Pirmąjį stulpelių rinkinį įdėkite į G: J ir L: O. G yra 7 stulpelis. L yra 12 stulpelis. Šiame tekste pakeiskite 3 į 4 dviejose vietose, nes turite 4 stulpelius, o ne 3. Pakeiskite 5 į 7 dviejose vietose, nes pirmasis išvesties stulpelis yra G, o ne E. Pakeiskite 9 į 12, nes antrasis išvesties stulpelis yra L vietoj aš.

Pakeiskite tai:

Cells(NextRow, NextCol).Resize(RowsPerPage, 3).Value = _ Cells(i, 1).Resize(RowsPerPage, 3).Value If NextCol = 5 Then NextCol = 9 Else NextCol = 5 NextRow = NextRow + RowsPerPage End If

šiam:

Cells(NextRow, NextCol).Resize(RowsPerPage, 4).Value = _ Cells(i, 1).Resize(RowsPerPage, 4).Value If NextCol = 7 Then NextCol = 12 Else NextCol = 7 NextRow = NextRow + RowsPerPage End If

Dabar esate pasirengę paleisti makrokomandą. Išsaugokite darbaknygę paskutinį kartą.

VBA lange spustelėkite bet kurioje makrokomandos vietoje. Žemiau esančiame paveikslėlyje žymeklis yra iškart po jo Sub WrapThem(). Spustelėkite klavišą F5 arba spustelėkite piktogramą Vykdyti, kaip parodyta žemiau.

Paleiskite makrokomandą VBA.

Grįžkite atgal į „Excel“. Turėtumėte pamatyti tokius rezultatus:

Žiūrėti rezultatus „Excel“.

Įsitikinkite, kad pavardė, esanti 1 puslapio E stulpelyje, teisingai seka vardą 1 puslapio I stulpelyje.

Patikrinkite rezultatą.

Žiūrėti video

Šie veiksmai paaiškinti šiame vaizdo įraše:

Vaizdo įrašo nuorašas

Sužinokite „Excel for Podcast“, 2194 serija: stulpelių apvyniojimas.

Ei, sveiki sugrįžę į netcast'ą, aš Billas Jelenas. Šiandienos klausimas, kurį atsiuntė Gwenas. Gwenas žiūri vaizdo įrašą 984, kuris vadinosi „Sneaking Columns“. Tai buvo iš daugelio metų atgal, ir aš iš tikrųjų naudojau formulę, kad tai išspręstų tada, tačiau ši dvynių problema yra sudėtingesnė.

So she has a three column worksheet with around 15,000 rows. and needs to make each page six columns. So, on the first page, these 60 cells; and then next to it, the next 60 cells. Now, Gwen has figured out that she can fit about 60 rows. But for anyone else watching this, the most important part here is to figure out how many rows because you'll really screw things up if you make any of these changes after the fact.

Alright, so for me, what I'm going to do is I'm going to come here to page layout, I'm gonna declare that these seven columns are going to be my print area-- Print Area, Set Print Area. I'm going to go into Print Titles and say that “Rows to repeat at top” is 1:1. I'm going to go… Actually, I'd like to use Margins here-- Margins, Narrow, and then back in the Page Setup, Header/Footer, and choose whatever my, you know, Custom Footer should be-- Confidential. Do all of the those settings, anything you're ever going to change first. Alright? Because that's going to change the number of rows per page.

Now, I'm going to type in the number 1 here, this is just going to be some temporary data. I'm going to hold down the Ctrl key and grab the Fill handle, and go down until I'm sure I'm past the first page like that. And then, we'll just do a Print Preview-- Ctrl+P, Show Print Preview-- and you'll notice that I have 46 rows that fit on the first page. And let's just check, go to the second page-- so 46 plus 46 is 92, so we're getting 46 rows per page, 46 rows per page. That number is incredibly important-- 46. In fact, I'm going to write it down over here just so I don't forget-- 46 rows per page.

Alright, now, I'm going to solve this today with a Macro; back in video 984, I used some complex formulas to do it, but today a macro feels better. If you've never used macros before don't be intimidated. Here's how we start: We press Alt+F11-- Alt+F11-- that brings open this screen and actually, the very first time that you open Alt+F11, it's going to be just a big gray screen-- probably a lot like this-- like that. So you want to say, View, Project Explorer, Find your workbook here, and say Insert Module-- I've already done that-- and what we'll get-- and what we get-- is a white screen. And over here in this white screen, you're going to type this code, alright? The word "Sub" which means that this is a subroutine, and then any naming you want-- I call it WrapThem, no spaces there, so just jam everything together-- open and closing parenthesis. Then we're we're going to create a variable: FinalRow = Cells(Rows.Count, 1).End, and these four letters here are XL, not X1-- everybody screws this up, XL. And you can type it in all caps if you want but they're going to change it back to that format where the L looks like a 1-- don't put a 1 there. Rows.Per.Page-- and this is where you put whatever number you figured out. Now, for me it's 46; for Gwen, it sounds like it's 60. And then, the next row where we want the first data to go is Row 2, and then the next column-- 1, 2, 3, 4, 5-- is Column 5.

Alright, so I set this up. And then, the rest of this is going to be very, very generic. it's going to work with, you know, any size data set: For I (it's a variable) = 2 To FinalRow (that's how many rows we had) Step (that means every time through the loop we're going to increase by) RowsPerPage (which in this case is 46, for Gwen's case it's going be 60). We're going to say: Cells(NextRow, NextCol) -- so, next row's going to be 2, Column 5-- .Resize(RowsPerPage, 3) -- resize 46 rows, 3 columns-- .Value = _ (and that's an underscore there) It's going to be equal to Cells(1, 1) -- so whatever is in Row 2 comma 1, Column 1-- .Resize(RowsPerPage, 3).Value. And then, what we have to do is, we have to be a little bit clever here about after we paste the first 46 times 46 rows, by 3 columns.

Where do we go next? There, right? So, if currently, the next column is pointing to Column E, well, then I need the next one to go to Column I. I is the ninth column. Alright. So that's why we say NextCol = 5. But if we're not… NextCol = 5 that means our NextCol = 9. Then we're going to reset the next group back to Column E and the NextRow is going to be = whatever the previous row was, + 46. And then next time… now here, let's just walk through this, you don't have to run it one step at a time. But I'm going to do that with F8-- just to see what we get here.

And so, what we've learned, is the final row is real-- 15,582. We're about to write to row 2, column 5. And so: For I = 2 To FinalRow. The first time through, I is going to be equal to 2. We're going to say that Row 2, Column 5, is going to be equal to Row 2, Column 1-- 46 rows, 3 columns. I want to run this with F8. We'll look over here in the spreadsheet and we'll see that it turned out those first 46 came to this area. Alright. But, we're going to let this run again. Alright.

Now, the second time through the loop, the I has jumped up from 2 to 48. Alright. And so this time, we're going to be running to Row 2, Column 9, and we're going to be getting data from Row 48. Alright, now let's go check this one right here. So, what we see is Andy Hartley-- that works great-- down here at the end, Kelly Ferguson. But the next person should be Lue Rahman-- Rahman-- and that works, and it goes down to Lue Harvey, right there. Alright. Now, what we're hoping next time, is we get Barb Davison. I'll press F8 few more times, here's the next one and we look, and it's now writing to Row 48. Alright. And it's Barb Davison, and it appears to be working. At this point, I'm happy with it, I'm just going to click run.

And, actually, you don't have to go-- if you're not creating a video to explain this to somebody-- you don't have to go through and press F8; you could just come up here, click inside WrapThem, click run, and that fast it will take your data and wrap it into two columns.

Now, some things I see here-- Surname isn't wide enough, that should not affect our page layout, I'm hoping. And when I do Print Preview, I now have 170 pages. Data there, Page 2, Page 3, Page 4. Now, if we would change the margins at this point, everything is going to be screwed up-- it's going to be horrible. That's why it's really, really important, right up front, you have to do all of your page layout things before you calculate that 46. Now, of course, at this point, Save your workbook with a new name, alright? We don't want to destroy the personal workbook. And then you can delete columns A through D, and you have your results.

Now, if you want to learn about macros-- macros are incredibly powerful-- we probably could have solved this with a formula. And, certainly, the me from 10 years ago solved it with a formula, but at this point in my life, just a simple little 15 line macro is a lot easier. This book, by Tracy Syrstad and myself, will teach you all about macros.

Alright, wrap-up for this Episode: How to wrap 3 columns of data in 2 sets of columns per page. The super important step, you have to do all the page setup things first, Rows to Repeat at Top, Margins, Header/Footer, and then just type some numbers-- 1 through whatever-- I use the Fill handle with control; go to Print Preview, How many rows per page; switch over to Alt+F11; Insert a module and then type the code that I showed you in the video; click run. And most of the time, I advise people to save your workbook as xlsm, but in this case this was a one-time thing, I'm suspecting. So if you're, you know, just want to have that macro disappear, keep it as xlsx, save the file, it'll warn you that you're about to lose your macro. That's probably okay, because we've solved the problem well.

Ei, noriu padėkoti Gwenui už šio klausimo išsiuntimą, noriu padėkoti, kad užsukote. Pamatysime kitą kartą kitai internetinei transliacijai iš.

Įdomios straipsniai...