Bob.....
I want to thank you....I have tried that about 18000 times today, and it
didn't work....but I just now realized that I have to be on Cell H1, and then
highlight the whole column for it to work.....
AAAGGGHHH...can't believe I have wasted 4 hours of my life with such a
studip little detail....
Ah well.....guess you live and learn...
Can say that I have learned one thing from this...I will always make sure
that my cursor is on the 1st row of whichever column I am trying to format...
LOLOLOLOLOL
Thanks...
Sara
"Bob Phillips" wrote:
How about just plain old vanilla
=ISNA(H1)
--
HTH
Bob Phillips
"Frantic Excel-er" wrote in
message ...
Joe,
the problem occurs when the value in E isn't in my lookup table. Here is
my
code:
With ActiveCell
RowCount = .Offset(0, -1).End(xlDown).Row - .Offset(0, -1).Row + 1
.FormulaR1C1 = _
"=IF(RC[-4]=""C"",VLOOKUP(RC[-3],USB,2,FALSE),VLOOKUP(RC[-3],FAS,2,FALSE))"
.AutoFill .Resize(RowCount)
End With
the formula is actually an if statement with 1 vlookup if column "C" has a
"C" in it, and another vlookup if it doesn't have a "C" in it. So, I am
not
sure where the #N/A is coming from, but I believe it is because the value
isn't in the lookup table.
AAAAAGGGGHHHHH....
Any more ideas...I really appreciate the help....
"Joe" wrote:
if(iserror(vlookup(blah blah blah),1,vlookup(blah blah blah))
basically, this changes teh result of the formula to 1 instead of #N/A.
Now
you can do a conditional format on the 1.
I'd say make the 1 a text string, but vba doesn't like quotes
"Frantic Excel-er" wrote:
Hi,
I have a Vlookup function in column H of a worksheet (which is written
in
code as part of a macro). I want to do conditional formatting if the
vlookup
result is #N/A (which I would also like to be part of my macro). I
need to
do this for all the cells in column H, not just one specific cell. In
the
worksheet, I may or may not have a #N/A to highlight. Any help would
be
GREATLY APPRECIATED...as I have been trying to figure this out for 3
hours
now.
Thanks,
Sara
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