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Wazooli
 
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I did, and it summed the max values, rather than merely counting how many
were in each column. I am going to try and work out some code which counts a
specific conditional format. perhaps that is the better way.

"Bernie Deitrick" wrote:

wazooli,

Did you actually try my solution?

Since your table is, presumably, in A1:J300, simply use the formula

=MAX(A1:J1)

in cell L1, and copy down to L2:L300.

Then in A301, use the formula

=SUMPRODUCT((A1:A300=$L$1:$L$300)*A1:A300)

and copy to B301:J301

HTH,
Bernie
MS Excel MVP

"Wazooli" wrote in message
...
not what i am looking for. perhaps a more detailed explanation would

help.

i have 10 columns, each containing 300 rows. each column represents a
different condition. there is only 1 maximum value in a row. what I want

is
to see which condition is best, simply by having the most maximum values
totaled on the bottom. conditional formatting makes visual verification
easy, but getting a concrete number is not so easy.

"Bernie Deitrick" wrote:

wazooli,

Let's say that your table is in A1:F10. In H1, enter the formula
=MAX(A1:F1), and copy down to H2:H20.

Then in cell A11, use the formula
=SUMPRODUCT((A1:A10=$H$1:$H$10)*A1:A10)
and copy to B11:F11.

HTH,
Bernie
MS Excel MVP

"Wazooli" wrote in message
...
Is there as yet a workaround for this? I have a table of values,

where
the
largest value in each row is colored thanks to conditional formatting.

I
would like to be able to sum all the colored cells for each column

using
the
.interior.colorindex property.

wazooli