Hi Ben On Tue, Nov 15, 2011 at 16:21, Benjamin Beckwith <bnbeckw...@gmail.com> wrote: > #+TBLFM: $2=if(@# >=7, vmean(@-5$1..@0$1),string(""));
The above does not work because the range expression "@-5$1..@0$1" is an Org construct and has to be evaluated for every affected row already in Org, before it is given to Calc. It has therefore no other choice than failing together with "$2 =" (out of range), the expression "@# >= 7" is evaluated only in Calc later. This is one of the reasons for which I added "field coordinates in formulas" (@# and $#) in 2010-03. There are at least two solutions with a Calc formula for this use case: 1) range formula The clean solution, already given by Nick: On Tue, Nov 15, 2011 at 16:52, Nick Dokos <nicholas.do...@hp.com> wrote: > Try a range on the LHS: > #+TBLFM: @7$2..@>$2=vmean(@-5$1..@0$1) 2) Calc subvec with field coordinates in formulas This was the only solution before Carsten introduced range formulas in 2011-03 and might be interesting for understanding purposes: | Daily Data | Moving Average | |------------+----------------| | 10 | | | 11 | | | 12 | | | 13 | | | 14 | | | 14 | 12.333 | | 16 | 13.333 | #+TBLFM: $2 = if(@# >= 7, vmean(subvec(@I$1..@>$1, @# - 6, @#)) +.0, string("")); f-3 See also "Dynamic variation of ranges" in "field coordinates in formulas (@# and $#)" here: http://orgmode.org/worg/org-hacks.html reachable about one or two pages down with the current section numbering here: http://orgmode.org/worg/org-hacks.html#sec-1-3-5 For such a two-dimensional moving range, Calc subsrc/subvec is still the simpler solution to get the triangle than several range formulas would be. If you change the input field 16 to 20 you see that "+.0" is required in the formula to get 14.000 instead of 14 for the result. See "Which float format shows the fraction part also when the latter is zero?" here: http://orgmode.org/worg/org-faq.html#table-float-fraction Michael