Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#4
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.misc
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Rather than "the $ sign either side of the cell reference letter", think of
the first $ sign as before the column letter and the second one as before the row number. The first one makes the column absolute, whilst the second makes the row absolute. Hence there are four variants: A1 (both column and row relative) $A1 (column absolute, row relative) A$1 (column relative, row absolute) $A$1 (both column and row absolute) "SiH23" wrote in message ... Many thanks this is greatly appreciated. Just one more thing... what effect do the $ signs have in this formula? I am aware of absolute cell referencing which uses the $ sign either side of the cell reference letter, but not where a single one is used. Many thanks, Simon. "Gord Dibben" wrote: Select column G and Data ValidationAllowCustom =$G1=$B1 Gord Dibben MS Excel MVP On Mon, 22 Oct 2007 09:56:02 -0700, SiH23 wrote: Hi, The columns B and G in a spreadsheet are formatted to except date values in the form: dd/mm/yyyy. I need to set validation on Column G to only except a date that is either equal to or greater than the date in Column B. Any help or advice would be greatly appreciated. Regards, Simon. |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Data Validation Excel 2003 | Excel Worksheet Functions | |||
Passwords and Encryption for Excel 2003 for Validation Purposes. | Excel Discussion (Misc queries) | |||
Excel 2003 - Data Validation | Excel Discussion (Misc queries) | |||
Conditional Data Validation possible in Excel 2003? | Excel Discussion (Misc queries) | |||
Validation Confusion-Excel 2003 | Excel Discussion (Misc queries) |