Thread: #N/A
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Gary''s Student Gary''s Student is offline
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Default #N/A

You can explicitly address the #!N/A using the FormulaIs option in
conditional formatting and use ISNA or ISERROR in the formula
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Gary''s Student - gsnu200908


"Doug" wrote:

Some of my cells have #N/A in them because one of the required lookups in
missing in some rows.
The problem I am having is when I try to set up Conditional Formatting for
the values in that column. It will not work if the selected range runs over
top of that #N/A value.
Is there a way around this problem? I would just a soon that it overlook the
#N/A value.
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Thank you!