The formula is
minSdkVersion <= targetSdkVersion <= compileSdkVersion
minSdkVersion - is a marker that defines a minimum Android version on which application will be able to install. Also it is used by Lint to prevent calling API that doesn’t exist. Also it has impact on Build Time. So you can use build flavors to override minSdkVersion to maximum during the development. It will help to make build faster using all improvements that the Android team provides for us. For example some features Java 8 are available only from specific version of minSdkVersion.
targetSdkVersion - says Android system to turn on specific behavior changes.
Good example is dangerous permissions (from 23 API). If you set targetSdkVersion to 22 your application does not ask a user for some permission in run time.
Starting in Android 8.0 (API level 26), all notifications must be assigned to a channel or it will not appear. On devices running Android 7.1 (API level 25) and lower, users can manage notifications on a per-app basis only (effectively each app only has one channel on Android 7.1 and lower).
compileSdkVersion - actually it is SDK Platform version and tells Gradle which Android SDK use to compile. When you want to use new features or debug .java files from Android SDK you should take care of compileSdkVersion. One more fact is compileSdkVersion >= Support Library version
You can read more about it here.
Also I would recommend you to take a look at the example of migration to Android 8.0