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I have a range of cells that contain data. Some cells are locked to prevent
the data being changed. Others are unlocked so that the user may enter data. These unlocked cells are highlighted by setting the cell color to yellow (ColorIndex=19). Under certain circumstances the yellow cells may be locked. I wish to highlight this by changing the cell color. To do this I use a conditional format to set a different cell color. The conditional format formula in cell B3 is: =and(CellColor(B3)=19,Cell("Protect",B3)) 'ie if cell is yellow and locked The function CellColor() is Function CellColor(ThisCell As Range) As Integer CellColor = ThisCell.Interior.ColorIndex End Function This appears to make Excel totally unstable. Every time I now edit cell B3 Excel crashes with the message "Microsoft Office Excel has encountered a problem and needs to close. We are sorry for the inconvenience." PS I realise there is probably a different way of achieving the above, but this is a very simplified version of a more complex design. I basically need to know how to use the current cell color as part of the conditional formatting without Excel crashing. |
#2
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Aren't the two conditions testing the same thing. Why not just test for the
cell colour? -- --- HTH Bob (there's no email, no snail mail, but somewhere should be gmail in my addy) "Andrew" wrote in message ... I have a range of cells that contain data. Some cells are locked to prevent the data being changed. Others are unlocked so that the user may enter data. These unlocked cells are highlighted by setting the cell color to yellow (ColorIndex=19). Under certain circumstances the yellow cells may be locked. I wish to highlight this by changing the cell color. To do this I use a conditional format to set a different cell color. The conditional format formula in cell B3 is: =and(CellColor(B3)=19,Cell("Protect",B3)) 'ie if cell is yellow and locked The function CellColor() is Function CellColor(ThisCell As Range) As Integer CellColor = ThisCell.Interior.ColorIndex End Function This appears to make Excel totally unstable. Every time I now edit cell B3 Excel crashes with the message "Microsoft Office Excel has encountered a problem and needs to close. We are sorry for the inconvenience." PS I realise there is probably a different way of achieving the above, but this is a very simplified version of a more complex design. I basically need to know how to use the current cell color as part of the conditional formatting without Excel crashing. |
#3
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"Andrew" wrote in message
... I have a range of cells that contain data. Some cells are locked to prevent the data being changed. Others are unlocked so that the user may enter data. These unlocked cells are highlighted by setting the cell color to yellow (ColorIndex=19). Under certain circumstances the yellow cells may be locked. I wish to highlight this by changing the cell color. To do this I use a conditional format to set a different cell color. The conditional format formula in cell B3 is: =and(CellColor(B3)=19,Cell("Protect",B3)) 'ie if cell is yellow and locked The function CellColor() is Function CellColor(ThisCell As Range) As Integer CellColor = ThisCell.Interior.ColorIndex End Function This appears to make Excel totally unstable. Every time I now edit cell B3 Excel crashes with the message "Microsoft Office Excel has encountered a problem and needs to close. We are sorry for the inconvenience." Bob Phillips wrote: Aren't the two conditions testing the same thing. Why not just test for the cell colour? Because some cells will be: yellow and not locked yellow and locked * clear and locked I want to identify the highlighted condition * The problem still occurs if I simplify the problem to just using the cell color. Perhaps a better (simpler) example is to make the text bold if the color is yellow, normal otherwise. The conditional format formula in cell B3 is: =CellColor(B3)=19 'ie if cell is yellow The conditional format applied if the condition is true is: Bold The function CellColor() is: Function CellColor(ThisCell As Range) As Integer CellColor = ThisCell.Interior.ColorIndex End Function As soon as you change the color of cell B3, Excel crashes. I am using Excel 2003 SP2. |
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