Class Hlookup
- java.lang.Object
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- org.apache.poi.ss.formula.functions.Hlookup
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- All Implemented Interfaces:
Function,Function3Arg,Function4Arg
public final class Hlookup extends Object
Implementation of the HLOOKUP() function.HLOOKUP finds a column in a lookup table by the first row value and returns the value from another row.
Syntax:
HLOOKUP(lookup_value, table_array, row_index_num, range_lookup)lookup_value The value to be found in the first column of the table array.
table_array An area reference for the lookup data.
row_index_num a 1 based index specifying which row value of the lookup data will be returned.
range_lookup If TRUE (default), HLOOKUP finds the largest value less than or equal to the lookup_value. If FALSE, only exact matches will be considered
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Constructor Summary
Constructors Constructor Description Hlookup()
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Method Summary
All Methods Instance Methods Concrete Methods Modifier and Type Method Description ValueEvalevaluate(int srcRowIndex, int srcColumnIndex, ValueEval arg0, ValueEval arg1, ValueEval arg2)ValueEvalevaluate(int srcRowIndex, int srcColumnIndex, ValueEval arg0, ValueEval arg1, ValueEval arg2, ValueEval arg3)ValueEvalevaluate(ValueEval[] args, int srcRowIndex, int srcColumnIndex)
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Method Detail
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evaluate
public ValueEval evaluate(int srcRowIndex, int srcColumnIndex, ValueEval arg0, ValueEval arg1, ValueEval arg2)
Description copied from interface:Function3Arg
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evaluate
public ValueEval evaluate(int srcRowIndex, int srcColumnIndex, ValueEval arg0, ValueEval arg1, ValueEval arg2, ValueEval arg3)
Description copied from interface:Function4Arg
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evaluate
public final ValueEval evaluate(ValueEval[] args, int srcRowIndex, int srcColumnIndex)
- Specified by:
evaluatein interfaceFunction- Parameters:
args- the evaluated function arguments. Empty values are represented withBlankEvalorMissingArgEval, nevernull.srcRowIndex- row index of the cell containing the formula under evaluationsrcColumnIndex- column index of the cell containing the formula under evaluation- Returns:
- The evaluated result, possibly an
ErrorEval, nevernull. Note - Excel uses the error code #NUM! instead of IEEE NaN, so when numeric functions evaluate toDouble.NaNbe sure to translate the result toErrorEval.NUM_ERROR.
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