Atributing a value to a cell - Excel - excel

=IF(D3="+";I3("test1");I3("test1"))
The cell with the code just says "#REF!"
Its probably a sintax error..
What i want is: If the cell D3 is equal to "+" then the value of the cell I3 must be equal to "test1"

What you are asking for is impossible using formulas.
A formula can only alter the cell it is written in, it cannot alter any other cell.
Use of vba would be required to make this type of change.

It's syntax. Remove the () in the True, False components and use commas, not semicolons. Type this formula in Cell I3.
=IF(D3="+","test1", "")

Related

Conditional formatting (Change Cell Color) if cell value <> ""

so to give some context, I have an application running where I have written code where basically, on a button press:-
A new sheet is created
The columns "A:L" in the new sheet are conditionally formatted
The condition is If any cell in column A has a value then that cell color is red. Similarly, a different color condition for every column
To achieve this, I wrote the following code snippet in my Sub:
Dim condA As FormatCondition
Set condA = Range("A5:A500").FormatConditions.Add(Type:=xlCellValue, Operator:=xlNotEqual, Formula1:="")
Now the problem is that the execution stops at the Set statement with the error:
Invalid procedure call or argument
What is the problem with the statements and how can you rewrite the code to change the interior color of any cell in the column if a value is entered or present in the cell?
Thanks!
If you wish to test for cells that are blank, use a formula of ="". To put that formula in as the Formula1 parameter, you would use Formula1:="="""""
Note: This won't strictly test for any value being entered by the user, because the user could enter a single ' into a cell, or they could insert a formula of ="" into a cell, and both those cells will not be coloured using your conditional format. That probably isn't likely to be an issue but, if it is, a Formula1 of "=AND(A5="""",A5=0)" (i.e. testing that the cell is both a blank string and a number zero - which should only be True if the cell is empty) might work. (Untested)

Conditional formatting using the INDIRECT function fails with boolean AND or OR or with cells containing formulas

I have the following function for checking whether column L contains the word "completed" and I use INDIRECT to be able to color the whole row with Conditional Formatting:
=INDIRECT("l"&ROW())="completed"
This function works. However, I need to extend this, I want to use Conditional Formatting based on an extra cell as well, so I tried this:
=AND(INDIRECT("l"&ROW())="completed";INDIRECT("m"&ROW())="duplicate")
When I use this second function inside the Excel worksheet they give the proper TRUE or FALSE.
Furthermore, I needed a Custom Formatting on the result of a formula in a cell. I tried the following:
=INDIRECT("n"&ROW())=123456
This only worked if I removed the formula in the cell with the result itself as a number. Again, the function worked when pasted in an worksheet cell.
Is there a way to make this work inside Excel or is there a limit to what Conditional Formatting functions can do?
In case you ask: AND(1;1) works and makes everything yellow, AND(INDIRECT("n"&ROW())=123456;1) does not work, nor does replacing AND with OR.
The semicolon is because I am in the Dutch locale. Replace it with a comma if you are in an English locale.
Not sure why this wouldn't work in Conditional Formatting. But you can simply replace the AND function with * such as:
=(INDIRECT("l"&ROW())="completed")*(INDIRECT("m"&ROW())="duplicate")
You have to think in terms of xlR1C1 formulas to understand CFRs. A CFR based on a formula thinks of it as =RC12="completed" or more completely =AND(RC12="completed", RC13="duplicate").
The xlR1C1 formula does not change no matter what cell you paste it to; it is in this way that CFRs can be applied to a wide range of cells without expending calculation cycles to update the formula for each individual cell. RC12 means 'the cell in column L on the row you are on'. It does not change if filled down, filled right or copied to any other location.
Now unless you are actually working in xlR1C1 (File, Options, Formulas, Working with Formulas, R1C1 reference style) you have to convert the xlR1C1 to xlA1 style. If you are applying the CFR to a number of rows starting with the first row then the R becomes 1 and the C12 becomes $L.
'xlR1C1
=AND(RC12="completed", RC13="duplicate")
'xlA1
=AND($L1="completed", $M1="duplicate")
If you were applying the CFR to a range starting in row 2 change the $L1 to $L2 and the $M1 to $M2.
Among other reasons for not putting the xlR1C1 style formula directly into the CFR creation dialog when working in xlA1 style is that there actually is a RC12 cell in xlA1.

Excel Formula - Check if cell has formula

What formula do you use to check if another cell has formula? For example, I have 2 columns, A has cells which contains either a formula or a value.
(Column A usually contains Formulas but other users try to change their values by directly typing and replacing the formula that was previously there)
In Column B I want to add a formula that will say "HasFormula" if the cell on Column A has formula and say "PlainValue" if it contains a value.
I'm thinking maybe using =ISNUMBER() but that may not be accurate.
I am using Excel 2010.
Excel actually has a builtin ISFORMULA() function.
Say A1 has a formula and you want to check that. In say B1, you can use:
=If(ISFORMULA(A1),"HasFormula","PlainValue")
Edit: Per your comment, you don't have ISFORMULA(). An alternative is to create a quick UDF, and use the custom function in the worksheet.
In a workbook module, put this code:
Function isFormula(ByVal target As Range) As Boolean
isFormula = target.hasFormula
End Function
Then you can call it like this: =isFormula(A1) and it will return TRUE if A1 has a formula.
If you can't use VBA, then you can use this formula:
=IF(ISERROR(FORMULATEXT(A1)),"PlainText","HasFormula")
The MrExcel website (link below) has this method which uses old code from Excel 4 (which is still present for backward compatibility)...
Define a NAME such as "CellToLeftHasFormula" and in the "refers to" box put
=GET.CELL(48,OFFSET(INDIRECT("RC",FALSE),0,-1))
Then in column B use the formula =CellToLeftHasFormula which will return TRUE if it has.
Be aware that this will mean your Excel will now contain a macro and so will need to be saved as such (xlsm). I use this in Excel 2010.
For full explanation (and other .CELL options, besides 48) see MrExcel link: https://www.mrexcel.com/forum/excel-questions/20611-info-only-get-cell-arguments.html
You can use the Range.HasFormula property.
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/office/vba/api/excel.range.hasformula
EDIT:
Text and code from the above link:
"True if all cells in the range contain formulas; False if none of the cells in the range contains a formula; null otherwise. Read-only Variant. ..."
Worksheets("Sheet1").Activate
Set rr = Application.InputBox( _
prompt:="Select a range on this worksheet", _
Type:=8)
If rr.HasFormula = True Then
MsgBox "Every cell in the selection contains a formula"
End If
You can restrict the user by protecting the column A.
You can directly check if a cell contains a formula by using a shortcut Ctrl + `.
You can use vba and write a user defined function :
1. Press alt + F11
2. Insert module in workbook
3. Paste this code
Function IsFormula(cell_ref As Range)
IsFormula = cell_ref.HasFormula
End Function
4. Now, use Isformula in the cell wherever you want.

Excel VBA Add formula based on row

So I have that table above, I use Excel VBA to add new prices then add the formula to Decision column.
As you can see, cell B2 formula should be =IF($A2>50000,"Ignore","Buy") and cell B3 formula should be =IF($A3>50000,"Ignore","Buy") so the formula in B2 refers to the value in A2, this is the same for B3 to A3 and so on. I use the VBA below to add the same formula to blank cells. Yes, there will be blank decision cells and they need formula. I must NOT use autofill from top to bottom. I tried using below (LastRow is the usedrange.row):
Sheet1.Range("B2:B" & LastRow).SpecialCells(xlCellTypeBlanks). _
Formula = "=IF($A2>50000,""Ignore"",""Buy"")"
The problem with that VBA is even in cell B5 the formula is =IF($A2>50000,""Ignore"",""Buy"") when it should be =IF($A5>50000,""Ignore"",""Buy"") (should be $A5 instead of $A2). What am I doing wrong?
With SpecialCells(xlCellTypeBlanks) you will probably get a non continuous range. With this the auto fill process will not work with A1 formulas. But with R1C1formulas it will.
Use:
.Range("B2:B" & lastrow).SpecialCells(xlCellTypeBlanks).FormulaR1C1 = "=IF(RC1>50000,""Ignore"",""Buy"")"
RC1 means the Row you are currently in but always fix Column 1.
For R1C1 references see https://support.office.com/en-us/article/Overview-of-formulas-7abfda78-eff3-4cc6-b4a7-6350d512d2dc?CorrelationId=2bedf5ef-a3b7-4a82-9b12-6ee86b494ae9&ui=en-US&rs=en-US&ad=US#bmusing_references_in_formulas. Scroll down to The R1C1 reference style.
You can paste the formula in all cells, considering you have the formula in cell "B2":
Range("B2").Copy
Range("B2:B" & LastRow).PasteSpecial xlPasteFormulas
edit for more detail: You can use the R1C1 reference style, more importantly, R[1]C[1] notation. There is a caveat for different languages though, see the very end of the post. Examples:
R2C4 'row 2, column 4 so it's the cell D2 in A1-notation
R[2]C[4] 'the cell 2 to the right and 4 down from the current cell (where this reference is located)
R[2]C4 'the cell 2 to the right from the current cell in column 4 (D)
R[-2]C[-4] 'you can also give negative arguments, this is the cell 2 to the left and 4 up
R[2]C 'the same as R[2]C[0]
RC[4] 'the same as R[0]C[4]
R2C 'the same as R2C[0]
RC4 'the same as R[0]C4
R2 'row 2
C4 'column 4 (the same as D:D)
As you can see from the last three examples, the notations can't be mixed.
Now for your case:
If you want to have the following in cell Bx (replace x by any number)
"=IF($Ax>50000,""Ignore"",""Buy"")"
This would be the R1C1 formula
"=IF(RC1>50000,""Ignore"",""Buy"")"
or if it is more important that it is the column to the left:
"=IF(RC[-1]>50000,""Ignore"",""Buy"")"
The latter would be the like dropping the $ from the original formula.
Your second formula was
"=IFERROR(VLOOKUP(RC3,Database!$A:$F,3,FALSE),""Missing"")"
and Axel's answer
"=IFERROR(VLOOKUP(RC3,Database!C1:C6,3,FALSE),""Missing"")"
should be clear now.
If you don't want or can't use the formulaR1C1 property but still use the R1C1 style reference for a single cell, you can use the INDIRECT worksheet function. INDIRECT("R1C1",FALSE) is a reference to R1C1. The FALSE tells it to use R1C1 instead of A1 notation. It might behave slightly different than a simple reference if there is something other than numbers in the referenced cell.
I personally like the R1C1 notation better than the A1 notation mostly because it is easier to reference cells relative to the current position but also because it is easier to read for high column numbers and it's closer to the Cells(rowIndex,columnIndex) syntax.
One last thing: In other language versions of excel, R1C1 might be named differently. That doesn't affect the formula when you enter it via VBA (I think) but if you want to enter it from the worksheet, you need to keep that in mind. In German it's Z1S1 for example. This can also cause problems when opening the file with a different language version. If you used INDIRECT("R1C1",FALSE) in a formula, the INDIRECT and FALSE will be translated but the string will not so it will not work :( (The last part is from memory)

Excel formula to show linked cell ID

In an excel cell, I've placed a simple formula
=C4
The cell typically displays the value of cell C4, but instead I want to see the linked cell ID instead, which in this case is "C4".
Is there a formula to show me this? like:
=SHOWCELL(C4)
The reason I need this instead of simply typing the value of "C4" into the cell, is so Excel will maintain the link to the correct cell even if rows are inserted/deleted, AND show me which cell is linked.
You should be able to use the Cell function.
In Excel, the Cell function can be used to retrieve information about a cell. This can include contents, formatting, size, etc.
=Cell("address", C4)
This displays $C$4.
When inserting a row before C4, it is changed to $C$5.
In case you do not want the $ signs, one way would be the Substitute function:
=Substitute( Cell("address", C4), "$", "" )
You can create your own User Defined Function to achieve this. I call it "CellReference".
Usage:
=CellReference(B6)
displays "B6"
To use it, launch VBA, insert a module, and then copy the below into the module:
Function CellReference(cell As range) As String
CellReference = cell.Address(0, 0, xlA1)
End Function

Resources