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Coloring the cells by formula
I am not sure what this function is called. The cell can be programmed that
if the result is 0 or 1 or 2 or 3 - color will display instead of the number. So 0 is black, red, green, yellow. sample formula is IF(G62="GO", 1, IF(G62="BUY", 2, IF(G62="SELL", 3,0))) then the cell will show the corresponding color (0,1,2,3 - black, green, yellow, red). My questions a 1. what is this called? so I can search in 'HELP'. 2. are there more than 4 colors (B,G,R,Y)? I like few more and their corresponding value. How do I go about finding this out? I am looking for navy blue (and maybe more later). Thank you so very much. |
Coloring the cells by formula
It's called conditional formatting.
Depending on what version of Excel you're using you may be limited to 3 conditions. (Excel 2007 unlimited*) You have 4 conditions. To get around that you can use 1 condition as the default condition. Looking at what you want the default color should be BLACK. So, set the fill color of the cell in question to BLACK. Now, set the conditional formatting Select the cell you want to color Goto the menu FormatConditional Formatting Condition 1 Formula Is: =G62="Go" Clcik the format button Select the Patterns tab Select GREEN OK Click the Add button and repeat the above process for the other conditions. * limited only by available memory Biff "hopebear" wrote in message ... I am not sure what this function is called. The cell can be programmed that if the result is 0 or 1 or 2 or 3 - color will display instead of the number. So 0 is black, red, green, yellow. sample formula is IF(G62="GO", 1, IF(G62="BUY", 2, IF(G62="SELL", 3,0))) then the cell will show the corresponding color (0,1,2,3 - black, green, yellow, red). My questions a 1. what is this called? so I can search in 'HELP'. 2. are there more than 4 colors (B,G,R,Y)? I like few more and their corresponding value. How do I go about finding this out? I am looking for navy blue (and maybe more later). Thank you so very much. |
Coloring the cells by formula
It is called FormatConditional Formatting.
In Excel versions 97 through 2003 you can have have 3 conditions......4 if you count the default. 2007 has many more. For a list of the colors in the 56 color palette see David McRitchie's site. http://www.mvps.org/dmcritchie/excel/colors.htm Bob Phillips has an add-in that allows up to 30 condtions. http://www.xldynamic.com/source/xld.....Download.html Gord Dibben MS Excel MVP On Wed, 2 May 2007 13:39:02 -0700, hopebear wrote: I am not sure what this function is called. The cell can be programmed that if the result is 0 or 1 or 2 or 3 - color will display instead of the number. So 0 is black, red, green, yellow. sample formula is IF(G62="GO", 1, IF(G62="BUY", 2, IF(G62="SELL", 3,0))) then the cell will show the corresponding color (0,1,2,3 - black, green, yellow, red). My questions a 1. what is this called? so I can search in 'HELP'. 2. are there more than 4 colors (B,G,R,Y)? I like few more and their corresponding value. How do I go about finding this out? I am looking for navy blue (and maybe more later). Thank you so very much. |
Coloring the cells by formula
I am not sure what this function is called. The cell can be
programmed that if the result is 0 or 1 or 2 or 3 - color will display instead of the number. So 0 is black, red, green, yellow. sample formula is IF(G62="GO", 1, IF(G62="BUY", 2, IF(G62="SELL", 3,0))) then the cell will show the corresponding color (0,1,2,3 - black, green, yellow, red). My questions a 1. what is this called? so I can search in 'HELP'. One way is conditional formatting. Suppose you want the color of H62 to reflect what's in G62. To use conditional formatting, there's no need for numbers 0,1,2,3. Instead, select H62 and start with Format Conditional formatting For Condition1 in the dialog box choose "Formula Is" from the pull-down and put =G62="BUY" in the box to the right. Then in the dialog box click Format Patterns And choose the color you want (yellow). For "SELL" and "GO" click "Add " to add more conditions, each with its own formula and color. 2. are there more than 4 colors (B,G,R,Y)? I like few more and their corresponding value. How do I go about finding this out? I am looking for navy blue (and maybe more later). Conditional formatting allows three conditions. This plus the base color (when none of the special strings match) gives four possible colors for any particular cell. But there are lots of colors from which to choose the four, as was seen by clicking "Patterns." |
Coloring the cells by formula
Thank you so very much Gord. Lots of information on the links you provided.
I use Excel 2003. I need 6+ conditions. If I put the Add-in (to get say 10 conditions/colors) on my own system, then put the Excel file on a shared drive for others to edit. Will all the other users see the 10 colors using their own Excel 2003? or do all other users need the Add-In module to see the 10 conditions/colors? Otherwise, I will need to fit the 6 conditions/colors into the limited 4. Thanks again. Jane ---------- "Gord Dibben" wrote: It is called FormatConditional Formatting. In Excel versions 97 through 2003 you can have have 3 conditions......4 if you count the default. 2007 has many more. For a list of the colors in the 56 color palette see David McRitchie's site. http://www.mvps.org/dmcritchie/excel/colors.htm Bob Phillips has an add-in that allows up to 30 condtions. http://www.xldynamic.com/source/xld.....Download.html Gord Dibben MS Excel MVP On Wed, 2 May 2007 13:39:02 -0700, hopebear wrote: I am not sure what this function is called. The cell can be programmed that if the result is 0 or 1 or 2 or 3 - color will display instead of the number. So 0 is black, red, green, yellow. sample formula is IF(G62="GO", 1, IF(G62="BUY", 2, IF(G62="SELL", 3,0))) then the cell will show the corresponding color (0,1,2,3 - black, green, yellow, red). My questions a 1. what is this called? so I can search in 'HELP'. 2. are there more than 4 colors (B,G,R,Y)? I like few more and their corresponding value. How do I go about finding this out? I am looking for navy blue (and maybe more later). Thank you so very much. |
Coloring the cells by formula
The other users would need to have the add-in installed on their machines.
You could get away with more than 3 or 4 conditions if you used event code behind the worksheet. Similar to this which operates on data entry into column D Option Compare Text Private Sub Worksheet_Change(ByVal Target As Range) Dim Num As Long Dim rng As Range Dim vRngInput As Variant Set vRngInput = Intersect(Target, Range("D:D")) If vRngInput Is Nothing Then Exit Sub On Error GoTo endit Application.EnableEvents = False For Each rng In vRngInput 'Determine the color Select Case rng.Value Case Is = "GO": Num = 10 'green Case Is = "BUY": Num = 1 'black Case Is = "SELL": Num = 5 'blue Case Is = "DOG": Num = 7 'magenta Case Is = "EAR": Num = 46 'orange Case Is = "FOOT": Num = 3 'red End Select 'Apply the color With rng .Interior.ColorIndex = Num .Font.ColorIndex = Num End With Next rng endit: Application.EnableEvents = True End Sub This is event code. Right-click on the sheet tab and "View Code". Copy/paste into that sheet module. Gord On Wed, 2 May 2007 17:03:00 -0700, hopebear wrote: Thank you so very much Gord. Lots of information on the links you provided. I use Excel 2003. I need 6+ conditions. If I put the Add-in (to get say 10 conditions/colors) on my own system, then put the Excel file on a shared drive for others to edit. Will all the other users see the 10 colors using their own Excel 2003? or do all other users need the Add-In module to see the 10 conditions/colors? Otherwise, I will need to fit the 6 conditions/colors into the limited 4. Thanks again. Jane ---------- "Gord Dibben" wrote: It is called FormatConditional Formatting. In Excel versions 97 through 2003 you can have have 3 conditions......4 if you count the default. 2007 has many more. For a list of the colors in the 56 color palette see David McRitchie's site. http://www.mvps.org/dmcritchie/excel/colors.htm Bob Phillips has an add-in that allows up to 30 condtions. http://www.xldynamic.com/source/xld.....Download.html Gord Dibben MS Excel MVP On Wed, 2 May 2007 13:39:02 -0700, hopebear wrote: I am not sure what this function is called. The cell can be programmed that if the result is 0 or 1 or 2 or 3 - color will display instead of the number. So 0 is black, red, green, yellow. sample formula is IF(G62="GO", 1, IF(G62="BUY", 2, IF(G62="SELL", 3,0))) then the cell will show the corresponding color (0,1,2,3 - black, green, yellow, red). My questions a 1. what is this called? so I can search in 'HELP'. 2. are there more than 4 colors (B,G,R,Y)? I like few more and their corresponding value. How do I go about finding this out? I am looking for navy blue (and maybe more later). Thank you so very much. |
Coloring the cells by formula
Dear all,
One of my colleague suggested 'using another/more bytes' to increase the availability of color options. I am not sure what that means. Can someone share if that is doable and how? Thanks so much again. Jane "Gord Dibben" wrote: The other users would need to have the add-in installed on their machines. You could get away with more than 3 or 4 conditions if you used event code behind the worksheet. Similar to this which operates on data entry into column D Option Compare Text Private Sub Worksheet_Change(ByVal Target As Range) Dim Num As Long Dim rng As Range Dim vRngInput As Variant Set vRngInput = Intersect(Target, Range("D:D")) If vRngInput Is Nothing Then Exit Sub On Error GoTo endit Application.EnableEvents = False For Each rng In vRngInput 'Determine the color Select Case rng.Value Case Is = "GO": Num = 10 'green Case Is = "BUY": Num = 1 'black Case Is = "SELL": Num = 5 'blue Case Is = "DOG": Num = 7 'magenta Case Is = "EAR": Num = 46 'orange Case Is = "FOOT": Num = 3 'red End Select 'Apply the color With rng .Interior.ColorIndex = Num .Font.ColorIndex = Num End With Next rng endit: Application.EnableEvents = True End Sub This is event code. Right-click on the sheet tab and "View Code". Copy/paste into that sheet module. Gord On Wed, 2 May 2007 17:03:00 -0700, hopebear wrote: Thank you so very much Gord. Lots of information on the links you provided. I use Excel 2003. I need 6+ conditions. If I put the Add-in (to get say 10 conditions/colors) on my own system, then put the Excel file on a shared drive for others to edit. Will all the other users see the 10 colors using their own Excel 2003? or do all other users need the Add-In module to see the 10 conditions/colors? Otherwise, I will need to fit the 6 conditions/colors into the limited 4. Thanks again. Jane ---------- "Gord Dibben" wrote: It is called FormatConditional Formatting. In Excel versions 97 through 2003 you can have have 3 conditions......4 if you count the default. 2007 has many more. For a list of the colors in the 56 color palette see David McRitchie's site. http://www.mvps.org/dmcritchie/excel/colors.htm Bob Phillips has an add-in that allows up to 30 condtions. http://www.xldynamic.com/source/xld.....Download.html Gord Dibben MS Excel MVP On Wed, 2 May 2007 13:39:02 -0700, hopebear wrote: I am not sure what this function is called. The cell can be programmed that if the result is 0 or 1 or 2 or 3 - color will display instead of the number. So 0 is black, red, green, yellow. sample formula is IF(G62="GO", 1, IF(G62="BUY", 2, IF(G62="SELL", 3,0))) then the cell will show the corresponding color (0,1,2,3 - black, green, yellow, red). My questions a 1. what is this called? so I can search in 'HELP'. 2. are there more than 4 colors (B,G,R,Y)? I like few more and their corresponding value. How do I go about finding this out? I am looking for navy blue (and maybe more later). Thank you so very much. |
Coloring the cells by formula
Ask your colleague what is meant by that phrase and post here so's we all get an
explanation please. You cannot increase the allowable CF limits. Gord Dibben MS Excel MVP On Tue, 8 May 2007 09:15:00 -0700, hopebear wrote: Dear all, One of my colleague suggested 'using another/more bytes' to increase the availability of color options. I am not sure what that means. Can someone share if that is doable and how? Thanks so much again. Jane "Gord Dibben" wrote: The other users would need to have the add-in installed on their machines. You could get away with more than 3 or 4 conditions if you used event code behind the worksheet. Similar to this which operates on data entry into column D Option Compare Text Private Sub Worksheet_Change(ByVal Target As Range) Dim Num As Long Dim rng As Range Dim vRngInput As Variant Set vRngInput = Intersect(Target, Range("D:D")) If vRngInput Is Nothing Then Exit Sub On Error GoTo endit Application.EnableEvents = False For Each rng In vRngInput 'Determine the color Select Case rng.Value Case Is = "GO": Num = 10 'green Case Is = "BUY": Num = 1 'black Case Is = "SELL": Num = 5 'blue Case Is = "DOG": Num = 7 'magenta Case Is = "EAR": Num = 46 'orange Case Is = "FOOT": Num = 3 'red End Select 'Apply the color With rng .Interior.ColorIndex = Num .Font.ColorIndex = Num End With Next rng endit: Application.EnableEvents = True End Sub This is event code. Right-click on the sheet tab and "View Code". Copy/paste into that sheet module. Gord On Wed, 2 May 2007 17:03:00 -0700, hopebear wrote: Thank you so very much Gord. Lots of information on the links you provided. I use Excel 2003. I need 6+ conditions. If I put the Add-in (to get say 10 conditions/colors) on my own system, then put the Excel file on a shared drive for others to edit. Will all the other users see the 10 colors using their own Excel 2003? or do all other users need the Add-In module to see the 10 conditions/colors? Otherwise, I will need to fit the 6 conditions/colors into the limited 4. Thanks again. Jane ---------- "Gord Dibben" wrote: It is called FormatConditional Formatting. In Excel versions 97 through 2003 you can have have 3 conditions......4 if you count the default. 2007 has many more. For a list of the colors in the 56 color palette see David McRitchie's site. http://www.mvps.org/dmcritchie/excel/colors.htm Bob Phillips has an add-in that allows up to 30 condtions. http://www.xldynamic.com/source/xld.....Download.html Gord Dibben MS Excel MVP On Wed, 2 May 2007 13:39:02 -0700, hopebear wrote: I am not sure what this function is called. The cell can be programmed that if the result is 0 or 1 or 2 or 3 - color will display instead of the number. So 0 is black, red, green, yellow. sample formula is IF(G62="GO", 1, IF(G62="BUY", 2, IF(G62="SELL", 3,0))) then the cell will show the corresponding color (0,1,2,3 - black, green, yellow, red). My questions a 1. what is this called? so I can search in 'HELP'. 2. are there more than 4 colors (B,G,R,Y)? I like few more and their corresponding value. How do I go about finding this out? I am looking for navy blue (and maybe more later). Thank you so very much. |
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