Yet another conditional formating question (Excel 2003)
And there was much rejoicing! Thanks to all of you for your assistance.
"RagDyeR" wrote:
What Dave gave you was a formula.
All formulas *start* with an equal sign.
Therefore, enter:
=p8=max($p$8:$p$25)
--
HTH,
RD
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Please keep all correspondence within the Group, so all may benefit!
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"REJesser" wrote in message
...
Making progress; however, when the formula is saved as a condition, quotes
are placed around the whole darn thing.
"P8=MAX($P$8:$P$25)" instead of just P8=MAX($P$8:$P$25)
These quotes seem to render the formula useless. How can I keep the quotes
from appearing? Thanks.
"Dave Peterson" wrote:
Select P8:P25
With P8 the activecell, use this
Format|conditinal formatting
Formula is: p8=max($p$8:$p$25)
Same kind of thing with the second condition (if you wanted it):
formula is: p8=large($p$8:$p$25,2)
REJesser wrote:
Clearly I have done something incorrectly. I used the following as the
condition:
Formula Is =MAX($P$8:$P$25)
and then pasted it into cells P8 through P25. The result is all of the
cells changing color. I tried to outsmart it by using your second
suggestion.
Formula Is =LARGE($P$8:$P$25,1)
I lost. What am I doing incorrectly? Thanks.
"Pete_UK" wrote:
Can't you use the MAX function in a Formula IS condition? If you want
a different colour for the second largest, then you can use the
LARGE( ... 2) function.
Hope this helps.
Pete
On May 14, 2:21 pm, REJesser
wrote:
Good morning,
I have a spreadsheet that calculates the incident rate for various
work
sites - 17 in total. I would like the cell with the highest
incident rate to
have its background change to red. I'm uncertain as to how I can
have the
worksheet compare the 17 values and determine which is the highest.
With
conditional formating I am able to set 3 conditions and not the 16 I
would
need to solve my problem that way. Thanks in advance for any help.
--
Dave Peterson
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