GOT IT! I wasn't using the first formula you suggested correctly. But I got
there in the end (changed "cell value is" to "formula is") and it's working
just how I need it to. I'm still a novice but very slowly getting there.
Many, many thanks.
"Bob Phillips" wrote:
Are you saying that if anything gets duplicated then you want it to be
coloured, with a different colour for every different value duplicated?
There are only 56 colours in the colour palette, and many of them are very
similar, you would never spot the difference.
--
HTH
Bob Phillips
"css" wrote in message
...
This looks great. I will add that as it is something I will deffinatley
use.
However, for this purpose, 30 conditional formats still isn't enough (I
know,
I'm greedy!). I need to keep a record of all job numbers for a year so
there
will be hundreds of jobs numbers. Rather than setting a conditional format
for a specific number, is there any way of creating a general rule that
should 'any' number be entered more than once in the same spreadsheet, it
will alert me in some way either by a message flashing up or simply change
the font colour etc.
"Bob Phillips" wrote:
Don't know what happened here. It should read ...
Are you up for an add-in?
http://www.xldynamic.com/source/xld.....Download.html
--
HTH
Bob Phillips
"Bob Phillips" wrote in message
...
Are you up for an add-in?
Public Function MultiCat(ByRef rRng As Range, _
Optional ByVal sDelim As String = "") As String
Dim rCell As Range
For Each rCell In rRng
If rCell.Value < "" Then
MultiCat = MultiCat & sDelim & rCell.Text
End If
Next rCell
MultiCat = Mid(MultiCat, Len(sDelim) + 1)
End Function
--
HTH
Bob Phillips
"css" wrote in message
...
I have run into a small problem. The conditional formatting was
working
fine,
but I can only have 3 conditional formats. I will be entering many
different
jobs numbers and will want all of them to have a conditional format
so
that
if I enter the same job number somewhere else within the same
worksheet,
it
will be highlighted or the font will change to bold. Is it possible
to
conditional format so many different numbers?
"Bob Phillips" wrote:
Conditional formatting will do it with a formula of say
=COUNTIF(A:IV,A1)1
--
HTH
Bob Phillips
"css" wrote in message
...
If I enter a number into any cell which has already been entered
into
another
cell, regardless of row or column, is there any way in which my
attention
could be drawn to the fact that this number is already in the
worksheet,
i.e.
by highlighting or something similar.