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#1
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Occasionally the = sign is not recognised as indicating a formula, rather it
appears as part of a text constant i.e. typing =1+2 into a cell results in "=1+2" (without quotes) appearing in the cell. In other cells it results in "3" appearing as expected. Copy and paste the "non-working" cell elsewhere and it continues to be wrong - even if overwriting a "working" cell. Copy and paste the "working" cell elsewhere and it continues to be ok - even if overwriting a "non-working cell". Any thoughts very much appreciated. |
#2
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"chriscl" wrote:
Occasionally the = sign is not recognised as indicating a formula, rather it appears as part of a text constant i.e. typing =1+2 into a cell results in "=1+2" (without quotes) appearing in the cell. In other cells it results in "3" appearing as expected. This (the text result) will happen if you put a space before "=". Is that perhaps what you are doing? |
#3
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"chriscl" wrote:
Occasionally the = sign is not recognised as indicating a formula, rather it appears as part of a text constant i.e. typing =1+2 into a cell results in "=1+2" (without quotes) appearing in the cell. In other cells it results in "3" appearing as expected. Previously, I mentioned that happens when you put a space before "=". It also happens when the cell is explicitly formatted as Text. See Format Cell Number. |
#4
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Your "'non-working" cells is formated as text. When you copy it
elsewhere you're copying the formatting also so the new cell is now formatted as text. Copying a "working" cel into a non-working cell should correct the problem by "overwriting" as you have discovered in your last sentence..ed |
#5
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Thanks joeu2004 - you have saved my sanity.
Some cells were set to be text. " wrote: "chriscl" wrote: Occasionally the = sign is not recognised as indicating a formula, rather it appears as part of a text constant i.e. typing =1+2 into a cell results in "=1+2" (without quotes) appearing in the cell. In other cells it results in "3" appearing as expected. Previously, I mentioned that happens when you put a space before "=". It also happens when the cell is explicitly formatted as Text. See Format Cell Number. |
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