Sep 20, 2019 01:18 PM
I am attempting to collect data from employees that tracks incident reports over time. This roughly works as follows:
Form1: "Report New Incident"
This form collects information about an incident such as location, date, classification, etc. and assigns it a new ID.
ID | Date | Location
A | 1/1/19 | Plant X
B | 1/15/19 | Plant Z
Form2: "Update Incident"
This form asks the user for an incident ID and then some additional information is added to the original incident (new information or updates to old information).
ID | Date | Status
A | 1/3/19 | In progress
A | 1/5/19 | Solved
The idea is, the employee who is updating on an incident does not need to reenter information (such as location, classification), but should provide some updated information (update time, current status). Having two tables ensures they contain unique information with the exception of ID. Unfortunately, I can’t join together based on ID with some sort of JOIN query. Using lookups partially solves this, but then it gets more complicated with the next thing.
Form3: "Customer Reports"
I have a 3rd table which stores dates and associated values for each date (for example, customer complaint numbers or other metrics).
Date | Value 1 | Value 2
12/1/18 | 5 | 1
1/2/19 | 5 | 2
1/4/19 | 6 | 1
2/1/19 | 1 | 1
Then, in some table (2 or otherwise) I need to sum values from the 3rd table based on the date and its relationship to the dates in Table 2. This would be something like SUMIF(VALUE1,DATE>TABLE1:DATE AND DATE <TABLE2:DATE)
ID | Date | Status | Sum Value 1 | Sum Value 2
A | 1/3/19 | In progress | 5 | 2
A | 1/5/19 | Solved | 11 | 3
This last part is important since I want to use blocks to track how incidents and our response to them (or lack of response) effects the severity of the fallout as a result of the incident. I can’t think of how to combine this information into one table since the data in table 2 (incident status updates) and table 3 (issue reports/metrics) are quite different data types and reported by different employees.
Any ideas on how to accomplish this or how to better format my data to meet my needs? It is unfortunate that AirTable doesn’t allow SQL queries to combine tables as I think it would solve a lot of these.
Sep 20, 2019 08:29 PM
Hmm, well for starters, unless you establish collaborators in your base, the ability to “update” the way you described it is not baseline functionality of Airtable. There is a slick third-part app on the market you can find here:
https://openside.com/product/on2air-forms/
Watch the video and you’ll see how they select a record from the dropdown and submit an update.
Keep us posted on your success!
-Jeff
Apr 28, 2020 08:05 AM
Another possible 3rd-party solution for you might be this:
Update Existing Records with Airtable Forms
Aug 16, 2022 08:33 AM
I’ve heard great things about MiniExtensions (what Scott suggested). You CAN DIY the form updates in Airtable, though. Here’s a YouTube tutorial that shows how using wedding RSVPs as an example: How to collect wedding RSVPs with Airtable forms + automation - YouTube