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It's impossible to convert the cell references to absolute references
without know what cell this formula is going in. So here's how you can do the conversion: -In a new worksheet switch to the R1C1 reference style (Tools, Options, General). -Copy the formula ("=SUMPRODUCT(--(R[5]C[-54]:R[30006]C[-54]=""Ball""),--(R[5]C:R[30006]C=""Hit""))") into its intended cell (the one the macro would put it in). -Convert this to a formula from text by removing the extra quotes (at the beginning, end and around 'Ball' and 'Hit'). -Switch Excel out of the R1C1 reference style. -Make all the cell references in the formula absolute by putting "$" before every column letter and row number (e.g., T17 - $T$17). -Switch back to the R1C1 reference style. -Copy the resulting formula to VB, adding back the extra quotes it needs. -- Jim "Sandy" wrote in message ... How can the following be converted to an absolute reference FormulaR1C1 = "=SUMPRODUCT(--(R[5]C[-54]:R[30006]C[-54]=""Ball""),--(R[5]C:R[30006]C=""Hit""))" TIA Sandy |
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