I posted this last night but for some reason it didn't make it through to
get posted. My OE says it was sent and it shows that I did reply but the
post never got posted! So, I'll try it again!
See the reply by J.E. Mcgimpsey:
http://tinyurl.com/r9a78
Biff
"JLatham" wrote in message
...
Biff is correct - this kind of thing could be handled with some code
attached
to the worksheet itself. Essentially the code would trigger on the
Worksheet's Change event and determine: if a change had been made to a
cell
adjacent to a cell containing a "Y", and if that is true then if that
change
wasn't to the value in B1, then force it back to being the contents of B1.
The Application.Intersect method would be the one I'd use to start testing
the conditions.
"kvnexcel" wrote:
Thanks, Biff. Appreciated.
"Biff" wrote:
Hi!
A formula can't "push" a value to another cell. It can only "pull" a
value
and return that value to the cell that contains the formula.
Some clever person (that eliminates me!) can probably write some VBA
code to
do this for you.
Biff
"kvnexcel" wrote in message
...
Can a formula print a result in a target cell, one that doesn't
have a
formula itself because it also may be used for text entry?
I want users to be able to type text into cells in the B column.
The
exception is, when there is a Y in an A-column cell, I want B1's
content
(in
this case, "RED") to be copied into target cell B3. The Y is the
controlling
factor -- if it's there, B3 says RED; if the Y is not there, the user
can
enter own text.
Is this dual-nature B3 possible? It seems like the answer may
be an
IF in another cell that prints a result into B3. Like in the movie
`Broadcast
News,' I `say it here and it comes out there.'
A B
1 RED
2
3 Y