ExcelBanter

ExcelBanter (https://www.excelbanter.com/)
-   Excel Discussion (Misc queries) (https://www.excelbanter.com/excel-discussion-misc-queries/)
-   -   Preview Cell and Row Totals (https://www.excelbanter.com/excel-discussion-misc-queries/121151-preview-cell-row-totals.html)

abmonty

Preview Cell and Row Totals
 
In previous versions and Excel 2003 you could highlight a row or column of
numbers and the total of that group of cells would appear in the lower right
of the Excel screen. I've noticed recently that this no longer happens which
suggest that I've inadvertently turned something off. How do I get the total
of a selected row or column to be automatically caluclated and shown. I know
how to do the @sum thing but this is different. What I'm looking for is an
Excel feature that I've seemingly managed to turn off.

Mike Rogers

Preview Cell and Row Totals
 
abmonty

Right click in the area where the sum, aka "total", used to be. Make sure
"sum" is checked.

Does this help?

Mike Rogers

"abmonty" wrote:

In previous versions and Excel 2003 you could highlight a row or column of
numbers and the total of that group of cells would appear in the lower right
of the Excel screen. I've noticed recently that this no longer happens which
suggest that I've inadvertently turned something off. How do I get the total
of a selected row or column to be automatically caluclated and shown. I know
how to do the @sum thing but this is different. What I'm looking for is an
Excel feature that I've seemingly managed to turn off.


RagDyeR

Preview Cell and Row Totals
 
That "feature" is displayed in the Status Bar, so you could have *either*
disabled the Status Bar ... <View <Status Bar
OR
If the Status Bar is present, then right click in that area of the bar, and
check the particular action you're interested in.
--

HTH,

RD
================================================== ===
Please keep all correspondence within the Group, so all may benefit!
================================================== ===

"abmonty" wrote in message
...
In previous versions and Excel 2003 you could highlight a row or column of
numbers and the total of that group of cells would appear in the lower right
of the Excel screen. I've noticed recently that this no longer happens
which
suggest that I've inadvertently turned something off. How do I get the
total
of a selected row or column to be automatically caluclated and shown. I
know
how to do the @sum thing but this is different. What I'm looking for is an
Excel feature that I've seemingly managed to turn off.



Jim Thomlinson

Preview Cell and Row Totals
 
Additionally you will not get a sum (or any other aggregation) if any of the
formulas in the selected range results in an error such as #Ref, #N/A or...
--
HTH...

Jim Thomlinson


"Mike Rogers" wrote:

abmonty

Right click in the area where the sum, aka "total", used to be. Make sure
"sum" is checked.

Does this help?

Mike Rogers

"abmonty" wrote:

In previous versions and Excel 2003 you could highlight a row or column of
numbers and the total of that group of cells would appear in the lower right
of the Excel screen. I've noticed recently that this no longer happens which
suggest that I've inadvertently turned something off. How do I get the total
of a selected row or column to be automatically caluclated and shown. I know
how to do the @sum thing but this is different. What I'm looking for is an
Excel feature that I've seemingly managed to turn off.


Gord Dibben

Preview Cell and Row Totals
 
Right-click on the Status bar and select the display you wish.

Sounds like you are currently set to "none"


Gord Dibben MS Excel MVP

On Fri, 1 Dec 2006 08:06:00 -0800, abmonty
wrote:

In previous versions and Excel 2003 you could highlight a row or column of
numbers and the total of that group of cells would appear in the lower right
of the Excel screen. I've noticed recently that this no longer happens which
suggest that I've inadvertently turned something off. How do I get the total
of a selected row or column to be automatically caluclated and shown. I know
how to do the @sum thing but this is different. What I'm looking for is an
Excel feature that I've seemingly managed to turn off.




All times are GMT +1. The time now is 10:18 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
ExcelBanter.com