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1. Enter a Named Formula ; and it's not exactly possible to have the
N-F clad in a pair of curly brackets. 2. In a struggle to identify the N-F's flavour (Regular or Arrayed), are there tell-tale signatures to differentiate one from another ? 3. Is there certain amount of uncertainty in telling the given flavours apart ? 4. Regards. |
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If I understand you correctly,you don't (can't) use an array formula in a
Name. But it does work. For instance, if you add a Name of say Test, value MAX(IF($B$1:$B$205,$B$1:$B$20)). This is clearly an array formual, anjd needs to be CSE entered in Excel. But on the name just ignore it, Then use =Test, and it works fine. It updates whejn the data changes, etc. -- HTH RP (remove nothere from the email address if mailing direct) wrote in message oups.com... 1. Enter a Named Formula ; and it's not exactly possible to have the N-F clad in a pair of curly brackets. 2. In a struggle to identify the N-F's flavour (Regular or Arrayed), are there tell-tale signatures to differentiate one from another ? 3. Is there certain amount of uncertainty in telling the given flavours apart ? 4. Regards. |
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