Difference between revisions of "Documentation/How Tos/Calc: OR function"
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* Entering <tt>'''=OR(TRUE; FALSE)'''</tt> in a cell correctly returns <tt>'''TRUE'''</tt>, but the display in the formula bar is <tt>'''=OR(1; 0)'''</tt>. See [http://www.openoffice.org/issues/show_bug.cgi?id=84266 Issue 84266]. | * Entering <tt>'''=OR(TRUE; FALSE)'''</tt> in a cell correctly returns <tt>'''TRUE'''</tt>, but the display in the formula bar is <tt>'''=OR(1; 0)'''</tt>. See [http://www.openoffice.org/issues/show_bug.cgi?id=84266 Issue 84266]. | ||
− | {{ | + | {{SeeAlso|EN| |
* [[Documentation/How_Tos/Calc: AND function|AND]] | * [[Documentation/How_Tos/Calc: AND function|AND]] | ||
* [[Documentation/How_Tos/Calc: NOT function|NOT]] | * [[Documentation/How_Tos/Calc: NOT function|NOT]] |
Revision as of 12:43, 16 July 2018
CALC FUNCTIONS
- Logical Functions
- AndFalseIf
Contents
OR
Returns TRUE if any of the arguments are considered TRUE, and FALSE otherwise.
Syntax:
OR(argument1; argument2 ...argument30)
argument1 to argument30 are up to 30 arguments, each of which may be a logical result or value, or a reference to a cell or range.
OR tests every value (as an argument, or in a each referenced cell), and returns TRUE if any of them are TRUE. Any non-zero number is considered to be TRUE. Any text cells in ranges are ignored.Example:
OR(TRUE; FALSE)
- returns TRUE.
OR(0; 5)
- returns TRUE, because 5 is considered TRUE.
If cells A5:B8 all contain FALSE, and cell C2 contains =TRUE():
OR(1>2; A5:B8; C2)
- returns TRUE, because cell C2 is TRUE.
Issues:
- Entering =OR(TRUE; FALSE) in a cell correctly returns TRUE, but the display in the formula bar is =OR(1; 0). See Issue 84266.
See Also
-