Mauvis Ledford
Mauvis Ledford

Reputation: 42334

Permanently summing a column in an Org-mode table

In an Emacs Org-mode table, when you have a column full of integers I know you can do C-c + followed by C-y to paste the sum of the values in the column. I want to know the formula to place in the last row to always sum the whole column.

I've tried everything. The docs show you how to sum two columns together but not one.

Upvotes: 119

Views: 53307

Answers (6)

quazgar
quazgar

Reputation: 4632

Yet another possibility makes use of horizontal lines (@I, @II, etc.) which are useful anyways to structure your table:

| What  |    $$ |
|-------+-------|
| Ice   |  3.00 |
| Soda  |  6.49 |
| Gin   |  4.99 |
|-------+-------|
| Total | 14.48 |
#+TBLFM: @>$2=vsum(@I..@II)

Without a header, just let the sum start at @0 as suggested by others already.

Edit: I just saw that you wrote this yourself already in a comment to your question.

Upvotes: 73

George Michaelson
George Michaelson

Reputation: 41

Something which may not be apparent to a reader is the function is vsum() not sum()

The other thing, is that the @2..@-1 thing, is a reference to the row-specific label for the column being summed. The $A$1 thing in Excel is like @1$1 so a reference to vsum(@2..@-1) is saying "do a sum of the values from the column, using as the row index the @ value in the range 2, to the -1th (ie second last) row, but the column is a "given" in this so its vsum applied over [@2$col @3$col @4$col... @-1$col] if you try to map these concepts into Excel

Upvotes: 4

Louis Strous
Louis Strous

Reputation: 1074

|  3 |
|  2 |
|  5 |
| 10 |
#+TBLFM: @4$1=vsum(@1..@-1)

@1 refers to the 1st row, and @-1 to the row preceding the one holding the formula. That formula ignores hlines:

|  3 |
|  2 |
|  5 |
|----|
| 10 |
#+TBLFM: @4$1=vsum(@1..@-1)

Upvotes: 0

Johnson
Johnson

Reputation: 406

You can try this:

$<col_num>=<func>(@2..@-1))

@2 is static. It refers to the 2nd row onwards. @-1 refers to the second to last row.

I think this was the easiest and non-intrusive way. It preserves your column names and does not clutter up the visual space. It does not require you to address the last row. It is addressed by default.

Rows can be added/removed. No other markers.

eg.
#+TBLFM: $3=vmean(@2..@-1)::$4=vsum(@2..@-1))

Sample table

   | Time                   | Input             | Test      | InQty |
   | <2018-03-13 Tue 06:15> | Water             |           |   200 |
   | <2018-03-13 Tue 07:03> |                   |           |       |
   |                        |                   |           |       |
   | <2018-03-13 Tue 07:31> | Water             |           |   180 |
   | <2018-03-13 Tue 09:00> | Chai              |           |   240 |
   | <2018-03-13 Tue 11:30> | Chai              |           |   240 |
   | <2018-03-13 Tue 16:01> | Water             |           |    60 |
   |                        |                   |           |       |
   |------------------------+-------------------+-----------+-------|
   |                        |                   |           |   920 |
   #+TBLFM: $4=vsum(@2..@-1)

Upvotes: 15

Andre
Andre

Reputation: 841

The last row of a table is @> For example to get the sum for the third column in the last line, you can use the formula

@>$3=vsum(@2..@-1)

Maybe you have to adapt the @2, if you don't have a header line...

Upvotes: 84

huaiyuan
huaiyuan

Reputation: 26519

Assign a field-name using the ^ mark:

|---+---|
|   | 1 |
|   | 2 |
|   | 3 |
|---+---|
|   | 6 |
| ^ | x |
|---+---|
#+TBLFM: $x=vsum(@1..@-1)

See The Org Manual, Section-3.5.9 Advanced Features.

Upvotes: 77

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