The Questioner has three sheets in a defined columnar layout - essentially several rows per data set and several columns (one for each time period). These sheets are not being replaced, but a summarised version was sought where filtering could be used to focus effectively on relevant data. Thus, each sheet to be translated from columnar format to row-wise format.
The process itself is straightforward. The source data comprised 64 products @ 8 data rows per product. The output records were @1,350.
The questioner's code was hung up on the conversion of data to the output format. The use of 8 rows of data per product is important, and the code includes a check that the quotient the total number of rows of data divided by eight is an integer. In addition, the names of the Source sheet and the Output sheet are called by name (getSheetByName
) so that the code can be easily applied to any named Input Sheet and any named Output sheet. The only proviso is that both sheets must exists beforehand.
Initial resolution of the questioner's code hiccup was successful and using the methodology of getDataRange
and getValues
before the loop greatly improved performance. There are two loops; one with a vertical orientation, moving through the rows of data; and the second with a horizontal orientation moving through the time-related columns. However performance was initially very inefficient and the code was timing out before completion.
I modified the code to build a single 2D array and save it to the Output sheet just once at the end of the loops. This had a dramatic effect on performance. Total time to complete dropped from several minutes to less than 5 seconds.
function so5243560403() {
// Build a clean Output Sheet
var ss = SpreadsheetApp.getActiveSpreadsheet();
var SourceSheet = ss.getSheetByName("Category2");
var Target = ss.getSheetByName("Category3Output");
// Various variables
var SourceHeaderRow = 9;
var RowsPerProduct = 8;
var ProductLengthTruncate = 11;
var SourceArray = [];
var i = 0;
var w = 0;
// get the bottom of the column
var ColAvals = SourceSheet.getRange("A" + (SourceHeaderRow + 1) + ":A").getValues();
var ColAlast = ColAvals.filter(String).length;
//Logger.log("Last row in column A with data"+ColAlast); //DEBUG
var NumberofProducts = ColAlast / RowsPerProduct;
var lastRow = SourceSheet.getLastRow();
// Count the products and confirm eight rows each
var prodtest = isInt1(NumberofProducts);
if (!prodtest) {
// Logger.log("NOT an integer!");
SpreadsheetApp.getUi().alert("Number of Rows divided by rows by Product isn't an integer");
return false;
}
// Get data to clear Target ready for new data
var TargetlastRow = Target.getLastRow();
var TargetlastColumn = Target.getLastColumn();
// clear the content before re-building
Target.getRange(2, 1, TargetlastRow, TargetlastColumn).clear({
contentsOnly: true
});
// Get ALL the data on the SourceSheet
var SourceRange = SourceSheet.getDataRange();
var SourceValues = SourceRange.getValues();
// create loop for rows of data; first row of data in array=9
for (i = SourceHeaderRow; i < (SourceHeaderRow + ColAlast); i = i + 8) {
// create loop for weeks (Week 1=Col5, Week 2=Col6... Week 52=Col56, etc) (actual column numbers are +1)
for (w = 1; w < 53; w++) {
// Test to see whether there's a value for Display; the only field ALWAYS populated
if (SourceValues[i + 1][w + 4]) {
// Get Product and data fields
var Prodlen = SourceValues[i][3].length;
var prodedit = SourceValues[i][3].substring(11, (SourceValues[i][3].length));
var product = prodedit.trim();
var catalogue = SourceValues[i][w + 4];
var display = SourceValues[i + 1][w + 4];
var ESP = SourceValues[i + 3][w + 4];
var mechanic = SourceValues[i + 6][w + 4];
var join1 = product+" | "+display+" | "+mechanic;
var join2 = display+" | "+product+" | "+mechanic;
// Start building an array
SourceArray.push([w, product, catalogue, display, ESP, mechanic,join1,join2]);
} // end if data exists - process this week
} // end w - this week loop
} // end i - this row loop
// Copy the data from the array to the Target sheet
// count number of rows
var SourceArraylen = SourceArray.length;
// first row is #2, allowing for header row
// first column = A
// number of rows = length of array
// number of columns = 6 (the fields puched to the array
var TargetRange = Target.getRange(2, 1, SourceArraylen, 8);
// set the array values on the Target sheet
TargetRange.setValues(SourceArray);
}
function isInt1(value) {
return !isNaN(value) && parseInt(Number(value)) == value && !isNaN(parseInt(value, 10));
}
UPDATE
The second element of the Questioner's code deals with updating data to an "Output Sheet" as changes are made to "Category" sheets. The questioner's code for the update was OK, but was missing the translation of the source range on the Category Sheet to establishing the target range on the Output sheet.
The solution involves a rubric based on mathematical number sequence. In this case, the mathematical sequence is the row numbers for products on the source sheet; each product occupies 8 rows, and the first row is #10, so the sequence is 10,18,26,34....
onEdit returns the range of the changed cell and getRow
and getColumn
can be used to establish the co-ordinates of the changed cell. The challenge is, knowing the actual row number that was changed, to establish what number in the sequence of rows (and hence the product name) that the actual row number represents. It is also extremely unlikely (eight to one) that the changed row will coincide with the first row for a product number.
So it is necessary to apply the algorithm for mathematical sequences - twice. The formula to determine the nth number in a sequence of numbers is An = A1 + (D x(n-1)), where A1 is number for the first row (in our case, 10), D= the difference between each number in the sequence (in our case, 8), and n= the number in the sequence (in our case, the changed row number).
The first pass is to establish the position number in the sequence of numbers(product groups) represented by the actual changed row. It is very likely that the outcome is not an integer, i.e. it does not coincide with the first row for a Product group. So, the result is rounded down to the nearest integer, and the algorithm is processed a second time.
However this time we know the position of the sequence number, and we solve to find the value of the number. In this case, the formula is ((An-A1)/D)+1. This will return the row number in the Source sheet corresponding to the first row for the relevant Product group. We use this to identify what type of field was changed (Category, Display, etc).
The column number indicates the week number. Week 1 starts in Column F, so get column
enables us to establish whether the change took place in a week column (or whether it was to left of Column F). If to the left, then "not my problem", if in F or higher, then it needs to be noted.
Lastly, we do a getRangeValue
for the Target sheet and look for a match of the week number in Column A AND the truncated Product name in column B. This provides the co-ordinates to setValue
for the new value tracked from OnEdit.
function OnEdit(e) {
// Update relevant Outputsheets on changes in Category sheets
var ss = SpreadsheetApp.getActiveSpreadsheet();
// Establish variables
var s1 = "Category1";
var s2 = "Category2";
var s3 = "Category3";
var tsuffix = "Output";
//Logger.log("Sheet information");//DEBUG
//Logger.log("The sheets to track are s1= "+s1+", s2 = "+s2+", and s3 = "+s3+", and the Output suffix is "+tsuffix+". For example s1output = "+s1+tsuffix);// DEBUG
var TargetSheet = "";
var weekscolumnstart = 6; // Column F
var startrow = 10; // applies to the Source sheet
var rowsperProduct = 8; // applies to the source sheet
var changedfield = 0;
var changedfieldname = "";
var n = 0;
// Collect data from the event
var range = e.range;
var oldValue = e.oldValue;
var value = e.value
var source = e.source;
var sheet = source.getActiveSheet();
var ssname = sheet.getName();
// Logger.log("Range: "+range.getA1Notation()+", old value = "+oldValue+", new value = "+value+", source = "+source+", ss = "+sheet+", sheet name = "+ssname); //DEBUG
// get the co-ordinates of the change
var SourceRow = range.getRow();
var SourceColumn = range.getColumn();
// Logger.log("the Column is "+SourceColumn+", and the Row is "+SourceRow);// DEBUG
// the weeks range to the right, from column F (va = weekscolumnstart). So by knowing the column number of the even, we can calculate the week number that applied to the change.
var weeknumber = (SourceColumn - weekscolumnstart + 1);
switch (ssname) { // the field references are used in a GetValue statement where the column is a reference to a specific column
case s1:
TargetSheet = s1 + tsuffix;
//Logger.log("The Source sheet was "+ssname+", so the Target sheet is "+TargetSheet);// DEBUG
break;
case s2:
TargetSheet = s2 + tsuffix;
//Logger.log("The Source sheet was "+ssname+", so the Target sheet is "+TargetSheet);// DEBUG
break;
case s3:
TargetSheet = s3 + tsuffix;
//Logger.log("The Source sheet was "+ssname+", so the Target sheet is "+TargetSheet);// DEBUG
break;
default:
TargetSheet = 0;
//Logger.log("The change was made in a sheet that we don't need to track.");
} // end switch
// get product and other change information if the change is on a tracked sheet and in a relevant column.
// evalue for the event on a non-relevant sheet or in a non-relevant column
if (TargetSheet == 0 || weeknumber <= 0) {
// do nothing
} else {
//Logger.log("before calculating line number; the TargetSheet is "+TargetSheet);
// The source has eight rows of data per Product; there is no predictability about which one of the eight will be chnaged for a given product.
// However the sequence of all the rows follows a mathenmatical sequence, so by knowing the row, it is possible to determine the product grouping
// And by knowing the product grouping, it is possible to determine the first row of the product group.
//
// The formula for the position of a number n a mathematical sequence is: = an=a1+d(n-1)
// where an = the "nth" number in the sequence (equates to the nth Product); a1 = the start row (var=startrow); d = difference between each group (var=rowsperProduct) and n=the actual row number.
// In the first instance we know the row number from the event data, so we work backwards to solve for the position of that number in the sequence.
//
// 1) calculate the starting row for this product
// 2) (Row number - starting row) divided by rowsperProduct) plus one.
// 3) There's only a one-in e