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All, or nearly all, formulas are volatile by your definiation. In
Excel, volatile functions are those which force a recalculation without any data entry. The OP stated that no changes were made. Mark Lincoln On Sep 10, 11:08 am, Kevin B wrote: The mid function is a built in function of excel. By my definition, a volatile formula is any formula that updates dynamically as data changes. So based upon your layout and formulas, there could be any number of updates performed based upon a value change. -- Kevin Backmann "R Ormerod" wrote: Is the MID function built in? -- R Ormerod "Kevin B" wrote: All of the built-in functions in Excel are volatile, unless you've set recalc to manual. So any number of cells could be updated based upon the input and the resulting updates. -- Kevin Backmann "R Ormerod" wrote: I have created an Excel file which asks for a save prompt without any changes having been made in the file. I am using the =MID text formula in the file - is this volatile? To my knowledge I am not using any other formulae which are volatile. The only other reason I can think is that I have multiplecombo boxes which have list fill ranges, linked cells and Private Sub macros on change. -- R Ormerod- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - |
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