public final class Vlookup
extends java.lang.Object
Constructor and Description |
---|
Vlookup() |
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
ValueEval |
evaluate(int srcRowIndex,
int srcColumnIndex,
ValueEval arg0,
ValueEval arg1,
ValueEval arg2)
|
ValueEval |
evaluate(int srcRowIndex,
int srcColumnIndex,
ValueEval arg0,
ValueEval arg1,
ValueEval arg2,
ValueEval arg3)
|
ValueEval |
evaluate(ValueEval[] args,
int srcRowIndex,
int srcColumnIndex) |
public ValueEval evaluate(int srcRowIndex, int srcColumnIndex, ValueEval arg0, ValueEval arg1, ValueEval arg2)
Function3Arg
public ValueEval evaluate(int srcRowIndex, int srcColumnIndex, ValueEval arg0, ValueEval arg1, ValueEval arg2, ValueEval arg3)
Function4Arg
public final ValueEval evaluate(ValueEval[] args, int srcRowIndex, int srcColumnIndex)
evaluate
in interface Function
args
- the evaluated function arguments. Empty values are represented with
BlankEval
or MissingArgEval
, never null
.srcRowIndex
- row index of the cell containing the formula under evaluationsrcColumnIndex
- column index of the cell containing the formula under evaluationErrorEval
, never null
.
Note - Excel uses the error code #NUM! instead of IEEE NaN, so when
numeric functions evaluate to Double.NaN
be sure to translate the result to ErrorEval.NUM_ERROR
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