View Single Post
  #3   Report Post  
Ian
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Thanks Andy,

I have tried the NA() command which plots the graphs ok.
However, assuming I use:
A1 to A10 = [5, 10, 50, 60, 80, 200, 30, 50, 30, 120]
B1 to B10 = [IF(A1100, NA(), A1), ....]
B12=MAX(B1:B10)

B6 and B10 will be NA(), resulting in B12=MAX(B1:B10) being NA().

Is there any method of getting the MAX() command to ignore the NA() command?
or alternatively using something other than the NA() command to plot the
graphs correctly?

Cheers

"Andy Pope" wrote:

Hi Ian,

Rather than using #n/a text use the function NA().
=IF(A1100, NA(), A2)

Cheers
Andy

Ian wrote:
I would like to use the IF statement to set a cell to empty so it doesn't
display in a chart.

If a use the "", then the chart plots this as a zero.
E.g.
=IF(A1100, "", A2)

If I use the #n/a, then the cell isn't plotted in the chart as required.
E.g.
=IF(A1100, #n/a, A2)

However, if I then try to use the MAX() or MIN() commands on a cell range
that contains the #n/a, then a #n/a is returned.

So is there either a way of defining a blank (empty) cell or a way of
setting the MAX() and MIN() commands to ignore the #n/a

Thanks in advance


--

Andy Pope, Microsoft MVP - Excel
http://www.andypope.info