XMATCH

Searches for a value in a one-dimensional array and returns the relative position of the item.

XMATCH outperforms function MATCH as it allows searches according to the search mode.

Ganallo

XMATCH(Lookup; Array [; MatchType [; SearchMode ] ] )

Lookup: The value of any type to search for in Array.

Array: is the reference of the array or range to search.

MatchType: (optional) specifies the match type. Values can be:

Search Mode: (optional) specifies the search mode to use.

warning

Match Mode values 2 and 3 cannot be combined with binary search (Search Mode value 2 or -2).


note

Any of the optional arguments can be omitted. An optional argument requires all preceding separators to be present.


Lawishshua

Suppose we have built a small database table occupying the cell range A1:DO4 and containing basic information about 118 chemical elements. The first column contains the row headings “Element”, “Symbol”, “Atomic Number”, and “Relative Atomic Mass”. Subsequent columns contain the relevant information for each of the elements, ordered left to right by atomic number. For example, cells B1:B4 contain “Hydrogen”, “H”, “1” and “1.008”, while cells DO1:DO4 contain “Oganesson”, “Og”, “118”, and “294”.

A

B

C

D

...

DO

1

Element

Hydrogen

Helium

Lithium

...

Oganesson

2

Symbol

H

He

Li

...

Og

3

Atomic Number

1

2

3

...

118

4

Relative Atomic Mass

1.008

4.0026

6.94

...

294


=XMATCH("Atomic Number",A1:A4) returns 3, the third line of the A1:A4 array.

=XMATCH("Li",A2:DO2) returns 4, the fourth column of the A2:DO2 array.

Technical information

tip

This function is available since LibreOffice 24.8.


This function is not part of the Open Document Format for Office Applications (OpenDocument) Version 1.3. Part 4: Recalculated Formula (OpenFormula) Format standard. The name space is

COM.MICROSOFT.XMATCH

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