![]() |
Conditional Formatting
Is it possible to apply a conditional formatting in cases where each value in
column P exceeds the adjacent value in column D. I have several hundred rows and would like to do this without visiting each individual cell in column P. |
Conditional Formatting
Apply it to one cell, then select the entire column or just the cells you
want. Make sure the first cell is part of the selection. Go to the Conditional Formatting menu and it should display the custom format from that first cell. Click OK and it will apply it to the selected cells. Or, copy/paste formats. -- Tim Zych www.higherdata.com Compare data in workbooks and find differences with Workbook Compare A free, powerful, flexible Excel utility "MDKimzey" wrote in message ... Is it possible to apply a conditional formatting in cases where each value in column P exceeds the adjacent value in column D. I have several hundred rows and would like to do this without visiting each individual cell in column P. |
Conditional Formatting
Where in the Conditional Formatting menu should I see the custom formatting
applied to the first cell? I wonder if this feature was left out of Excel 2007. "Tim Zych" wrote: Apply it to one cell, then select the entire column or just the cells you want. Make sure the first cell is part of the selection. Go to the Conditional Formatting menu and it should display the custom format from that first cell. Click OK and it will apply it to the selected cells. Or, copy/paste formats. -- Tim Zych www.higherdata.com Compare data in workbooks and find differences with Workbook Compare A free, powerful, flexible Excel utility "MDKimzey" wrote in message ... Is it possible to apply a conditional formatting in cases where each value in column P exceeds the adjacent value in column D. I have several hundred rows and would like to do this without visiting each individual cell in column P. |
Conditional Formatting
Looks like conditional formatting is drastically modified in 2007. Add to
the "Applies To" range reference. -- Tim Zych www.higherdata.com Compare data in workbooks and find differences with Workbook Compare A free, powerful, flexible Excel utility "MDKimzey" wrote in message ... Where in the Conditional Formatting menu should I see the custom formatting applied to the first cell? I wonder if this feature was left out of Excel 2007. "Tim Zych" wrote: Apply it to one cell, then select the entire column or just the cells you want. Make sure the first cell is part of the selection. Go to the Conditional Formatting menu and it should display the custom format from that first cell. Click OK and it will apply it to the selected cells. Or, copy/paste formats. -- Tim Zych www.higherdata.com Compare data in workbooks and find differences with Workbook Compare A free, powerful, flexible Excel utility "MDKimzey" wrote in message ... Is it possible to apply a conditional formatting in cases where each value in column P exceeds the adjacent value in column D. I have several hundred rows and would like to do this without visiting each individual cell in column P. |
Conditional Formatting
Yes.
Select your range of cells in P, with P2 active, then CF/ Cell Value Is/ Greater Than/ =D2 and Format as appropriate. Otherwise apply the format to P2 and use Format Paint to copy down Or, as a third optionn, Copy from P2 and Paste Special/ Format -- David Biddulph "MDKimzey" wrote in message ... Is it possible to apply a conditional formatting in cases where each value in column P exceeds the adjacent value in column D. I have several hundred rows and would like to do this without visiting each individual cell in column P. |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 08:09 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
ExcelBanter.com