Thanks for your help. Excel 2010 question. I am attempting to have conditional formatting in one column that is based on information in that column but only under the case of a blank cell in an adjacent column. For example:
Column E has dates that have passed or not passed yet (if is has passed, action needs to be taken on that given file).
Column J has text that indicates if action has been taken on that given file (date that action was taken or another note).
I want to highlight cell in column E red: If the date in column E is today or later AND the cell in column J is blank.
This will tell me if action has not yet been taken on this file where the take-action date has passed.
This seems like a simple formula but nothing has worked for me!
If you make a new rule for conditional formatting.
Select the rule for "Use Formula to Determine Which Cell to Format"
You can then use an "AND()" formula
=AND(B4>=TODAY(),C4="")
In this example if both conditions are "TRUE" it will highlight the cell.
Note* You can apply this formula to a range but enter the formula you would use in the first cell.
Related
I'm trying to create a form in excel for my team to fill out which highlights certain cells in a row as compulsory (format the cell colour) based on the number from a table in another sheet which has 3 preset dimensions ("M"=Mandatory, "P"=Prohibited, "O"=Optional) for each number across multiple analysis field.
I have tried conditional formatting formulas to highlight the cell to fill out if the lookup of the number chosen returns "M") but I don't seem to have a formula which validated this and returns with the cell highlighted when it needs to completed.
I would like the formula to return the cell as highlighted if it is mandatory based on the lookup to the table and need the user to fill out the cell with the information relevant.
Any help would be much appreciated.
If I understand your question correctly you just want the cell to highlight when its sister cell in another sheet is coded "M". That's a fairly easy formula.
=Sheet2!$B1="M"
This is for a straight column in B, where the cell it's checking against is in sheet 2 and also in column B. If it's for a row simply move the $ to say b$1.
If you want the highlight to disappear when the cell is filled in use this formula:
=AND($B1=0,Sheet2!$B1="M")
I'm working on a conditional formatting issue. I would like the whole row to highlight if the text in the same row in columns B and C disagree. So far, I've been able to write conditional formatting rules that leave the cell un-touched if there is no data and if there is a data entry that disagrees with the text in Column B, but I can't seem to get the formula to apply to the full row.
Here is what I currently have:screenshot of the document with conditional formatting rules visible
I'm working on Excel 2010. Maybe there is a way to use a logic formula?
I look forward to hearing suggestions!
You can do this with a formula. Highlight the range you would like to format, create a new conditional format, select "Use a formula..." and enter the formula as it would apply to the first cell or in this case row.
In my case, I chose the first 6 rows: $1:$6 as my range. So in this case, I would enter the formula as if I were only entering it for my first cell. The formula =$B1<>$C1 will check for inequality between B1 and C1 in the first row, B2 and C2 in the second row, and so on.
I have a 1600-2000 rows of data in a spreadsheet that changes daily. I would like to highlight any row that contains such as 000000000000053851 in the R column. I had tried conditional formatting using this formula:
=OR($R1="000000000000549543",$R1="000000000000267294,$R1="000000000000053851")
but it seems to highlight a few rows that are blank in column R also.
Using the same numbers highlighted in column R, I would like to have an alternate number and possibly other data pasted into the corresponding row in column S. Each number has a unique alternate number and data to go along with it. This is how I picture a line may look with the highlighting and alternate data next to it:
I intend to record a macro using a few of the different steps that are likely required to do this. Any way, whether conditional formatting or an array formula, would be great to help with this.
For the sample provided, a CF rule of:
=LEFT(R1,12)="000000000000"
applied to ColumnR will format the sample and if you wish the cell immediately to the right. It will not highlight blank cells.
HOME > Styles - Conditional Formatting, New Rule..., Use a formula to determine which cells to format and Format values where this formula is true:, enter formula from above and Format... with Fill red, OK, OK.
If you want the cell to the right to be formatted also, select ColumnsR:S instead of just ColumnR and change R1 in the formula to $R1.
For the cell to the right you provide few details but VLOOKUP in conjunction with a two-column table should suit. Column on the left being the ColumnR value, with the right-hand column for the same row the ColumnS value required. This table could be placed almost anywhere.
This could all be done with Record Macro.
I would like to color cells in each row based on the value of a cell in the same row and then do the next one.
How do you set the formula to be able to color the cell if not equal to a reference cell on the same row?
So I just want to change the color of a different cell than reference cell which will have a different value for each row.
In Excel you will need to create a formatting rule, within the modal select the option that you want to use a formula to decide what cells to format:
Within the edit box you can type the formula that is used. The formula in the example will check whether the value of the 1 cell in the column is not empty. If this is true, the cell will be formatted as specified in the format preview.
Mainly using the ROW and COLUMN functions in Excel you can get access to the current Row and Column of the Cell for which the formula is executed.
Given the input:
Select Cells B2:G6 and click on Conditional Formatting
Your prompt will look different on Windows, but the important part is "Use a formula to determine which cells to format" The formula is =B2<>$A2 Please note the lack of $ because it needs to be flexible (except for the reference cell column which in my case is A)
Final result is:
Conditional formatting foes not need to operate on the cell you are formatting. Using a mixture of $ and non-$ formatted formulas, you can set highlighting accordingly.
Note to make sure this works correctly, highlight the area to be formatted first, and note where you start. e.g. If I wanted this to apply to A2:A50, then I would highlight A2 first, and make the formula reference row 2.
Also, note that you will have to type in the formula. Any clicking of cells will automatically put in $ signs to fix the comparison to that specific location, which is not the behavior we desire
e.g. To format A2:K50, when the H value in that column is 7
Highlight A2:K50
Conditional Formatting -> New Rule -> Use a formula
formula would be =($H2=7) <- this will fix the column to be H, and vary the row accordingly
Format as desired
e.g.2. To format based on previous cell
Highlight A2:A50
Conditional Formatting -> New Rule -> Use a formula
formula would be =(A2<>A1) <- this will check the row above each time
Format as desired
Is there a way for Conditional Formatting in Excel to refer to a whole column from the original reference column?
For example, i want the E column to refer to the C column such that if the dates in the E column are 2 days after the dates in the E column, it will turn green. And i want to be able to do this as fast as possible.
The problem is that right now even if the function would just be the same for the E to C column at each row, i have to do it one by one. Is there anyway to match the whole E column to the C column?
Thanks!
You can use conditional format on the first cell in the column, and use the format painter to copy it to the rest of the column. Use a formula like '=B1=A1+2' as condition for the first cell. Make sure there are no dollarsigns in the formula!
Alternatively, you could use manage rules to apply them to a range. Have a look at the pictures below. I cannot post them here because I have not enough credits yet :-)
http://i.stack.imgur.com/FA3o9.jpg
http://i.stack.imgur.com/qYcvQ.jpg
There is a function called auto fill in Excel. The auto fill function makes it possible to automatically fill in your function in a whole column with just a few clicks.
link to tutorial
Example of auto fill:
Enter 1 in cell A1
Write =(A1+1) in cell A2
Select cell range A2:A10
Click on "Fill" in the ribbon (see image)
Select Down
Now there is numbers 1-10 in columns A1:A10
You may use this feature to add cells with your function in a whole column.