Difference between revisions of "CountIf Command"
From GeoGebra Manual
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; CountIf[ <Condition>, <Variable>, <List> ] | ; CountIf[ <Condition>, <Variable>, <List> ] | ||
− | : | + | : As above, using a more flexible syntax. |
− | + | :{{example|1=<div>Given points ''P'', ''Q'', ''R'' <code>CountIf[x(A) < 3, A, {P, Q, R}]</code> will count only the points whose x-coordinate is less than ''3''. The variable ''A'' is replaced in turn with ''P'' then ''Q'' then ''R'' for the check. Therefore <code><nowiki>CountIf[x(A) < 3, A, {(0, 1), (4, 2), (2, 2)}]</nowiki></code> yields the number ''2''.</div>}} |
Revision as of 10:32, 4 April 2015
- CountIf[ <Condition>, <List> ]
- Counts the number of elements in the list satisfying the condition.
- Example:
CountIf[x < 3, {1, 2, 3, 4, 5}]
gives you the number 2.CountIf[x < 3, A1:A10]
, where A1:A10 is a range of cells in the spreadsheet, counts all cells whose values are less than 3.
- Note: For list of numbers arbitrary condition may be used. For list of other objects one can use only conditions of the form
x==constant
orx!=constant
.
- CountIf[ <Condition>, <Variable>, <List> ]
- As above, using a more flexible syntax.
- Example:Given points P, Q, R
CountIf[x(A) < 3, A, {P, Q, R}]
will count only the points whose x-coordinate is less than 3. The variable A is replaced in turn with P then Q then R for the check. ThereforeCountIf[x(A) < 3, A, {(0, 1), (4, 2), (2, 2)}]
yields the number 2.