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JasonH

how do I shade alternating rows in spreadsheet
 
I want to shade every other line in Excel spreadsheet but if I go back and
insert an additional line it duplicates the color of previous line. I would
like it to switch to alternating colors as if I had not inserted an
additional line.

Bob Phillips[_3_]

how do I shade alternating rows in spreadsheet
 
See http://www.xldynamic.com/source/xld.CF.html#rows

--
__________________________________
HTH

Bob

"JasonH" wrote in message
...
I want to shade every other line in Excel spreadsheet but if I go back and
insert an additional line it duplicates the color of previous line. I
would
like it to switch to alternating colors as if I had not inserted an
additional line.




JLatham

how do I shade alternating rows in spreadsheet
 
Select all of the rows you need to set up, use
Format -- Cells --Conditional Formatting
Change from "Cell Value Is" to "Formula Is"
and enter
=MOD(ROW(),2)=0
(yes, just like that with both = symbols in it)
and then set the format that you want even numbered rows to have (on the
patterns tab), [OK], [OK] and poof! you're done.


"JasonH" wrote:

I want to shade every other line in Excel spreadsheet but if I go back and
insert an additional line it duplicates the color of previous line. I would
like it to switch to alternating colors as if I had not inserted an
additional line.


Steven

how do I shade alternating rows in spreadsheet
 

Select the area that you want to shade (if you want the entire sheet
CTRL A)

In conditional formatting
Choose "Formula Is" =MOD(ROW(),2)



Gord Dibben

how do I shade alternating rows in spreadsheet
 
If you will be doing any filtering on the rows you will want to use

=MOD(SUBTOTAL(3,$A1:$A$2),2)=0

=MOD(ROW(),2)=0 won't retain banding when data is filtered.


Gord Dibben MS Excel MVP

On Fri, 10 Jul 2009 08:12:01 -0700, JLatham
wrote:

Select all of the rows you need to set up, use
Format -- Cells --Conditional Formatting
Change from "Cell Value Is" to "Formula Is"
and enter
=MOD(ROW(),2)=0
(yes, just like that with both = symbols in it)
and then set the format that you want even numbered rows to have (on the
patterns tab), [OK], [OK] and poof! you're done.


"JasonH" wrote:

I want to shade every other line in Excel spreadsheet but if I go back and
insert an additional line it duplicates the color of previous line. I would
like it to switch to alternating colors as if I had not inserted an
additional line.



[email protected]

how do I shade alternating rows in spreadsheet
 
On Friday, July 10, 2009 11:01:05 AM UTC-4, JasonH wrote:
I want to shade every other line in Excel spreadsheet but if I go back and
insert an additional line it duplicates the color of previous line. I would
like it to switch to alternating colors as if I had not inserted an
additional line.


Guys there is a much MUCH easier way to do with without special code or scripts or anything.

-Simply paint the two lines the colors that you want repeated
-Highlight the area or complete rows you want copied
-Click the "Paint Formatting" tool
-Paint that $%iT down your document (Click and drag as desired)
-Laugh at all the code you didn't have to write.
-Profit

GS[_2_]

how do I shade alternating rows in spreadsheet
 
On Friday, July 10, 2009 11:01:05 AM UTC-4, JasonH wrote:
I want to shade every other line in Excel spreadsheet but if I go
back and insert an additional line it duplicates the color of
previous line. I would like it to switch to alternating colors as
if I had not inserted an additional line.


Guys there is a much MUCH easier way to do with without special code
or scripts or anything.

-Simply paint the two lines the colors that you want repeated
-Highlight the area or complete rows you want copied
-Click the "Paint Formatting" tool
-Paint that $%iT down your document (Click and drag as desired)
-Laugh at all the code you didn't have to write.
-Profit


What 'code' are you talking about?
Why go to all that trouble when a simple CF formula will do?

--
Garry

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Christopher Stevenson

how do I shade alternating rows in spreadsheet
 
Painting doesn't seem any easier, but in any case it won't survive a row deletion.


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