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#1
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Example:
Cells A1:A4 have conditional formatting set up that states if they are equal to cell A10 they will be highlighted yellow. Is there a way to quickly see what cells drive conditional formatting? In other words, we can use Edit - Go To Special to see which cells have conditional formatting applied; however, this doesn't show us that A10 is involved. Since there isn't a formula directly involved, we can't trace precedents/dependents. Can we only know that A10 is involved in the formatting of A1:A4 by selecting those cells and going into the conditional formatting dialog box? Is there another, faster way? |
#2
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Probably nowhere near the answer you are seeking, but if you use CFPlus
(http://www.xldynamic.com/source/xld.....Download.html), that has an option to highlight the ranges formatted with the tool. You can then click on the highlighted area to see the formula behind it. -- HTH RP (remove nothere from the email address if mailing direct) "Nicolle K." wrote in message ... Example: Cells A1:A4 have conditional formatting set up that states if they are equal to cell A10 they will be highlighted yellow. Is there a way to quickly see what cells drive conditional formatting? In other words, we can use Edit - Go To Special to see which cells have conditional formatting applied; however, this doesn't show us that A10 is involved. Since there isn't a formula directly involved, we can't trace precedents/dependents. Can we only know that A10 is involved in the formatting of A1:A4 by selecting those cells and going into the conditional formatting dialog box? Is there another, faster way? |
#3
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Not quite what you ask, but it's pretty quick...
You can customize your toolbar to have an icon that shows the format|conditional formatting dialog. Tools|customize|commands tab|Format category (about half way down in xl2002). Drag that "conditional formatting..." icon/text to your favorite toolbar. Select a cell, click that button and escape to dismiss it. (Not really too bad.) Nicolle K. wrote: Example: Cells A1:A4 have conditional formatting set up that states if they are equal to cell A10 they will be highlighted yellow. Is there a way to quickly see what cells drive conditional formatting? In other words, we can use Edit - Go To Special to see which cells have conditional formatting applied; however, this doesn't show us that A10 is involved. Since there isn't a formula directly involved, we can't trace precedents/dependents. Can we only know that A10 is involved in the formatting of A1:A4 by selecting those cells and going into the conditional formatting dialog box? Is there another, faster way? -- Dave Peterson |
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