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isBlank()
Hello experts,
I'm trying to use the isBlank() function to in one cell to reference another directly to the right. Problem is, however, that said cell to the right, while holding a null value, also has a formula causing the isBlank function to return false. Is there a function that will return true if the cell is empty and has an associated formula? Thanks for the time, alex |
isBlank()
Try this:
=IF(A1="","blank but not empty","contains something else") Hope this helps. Pete On Feb 8, 4:33 pm, "alex" wrote: Hello experts, I'm trying to use the isBlank() function to in one cell to reference another directly to the right. Problem is, however, that said cell to the right, while holding a null value, also has a formula causing the isBlank function to return false. Is there a function that will return true if the cell is empty and has an associated formula? Thanks for the time, alex |
isBlank()
Blank means blank, not containing a formula. If the formula returns the
null string, then compare the value with the null string: B5: =C5="" or B5: =LEN(C5)=0 In article om, "alex" wrote: Hello experts, I'm trying to use the isBlank() function to in one cell to reference another directly to the right. Problem is, however, that said cell to the right, while holding a null value, also has a formula causing the isBlank function to return false. Is there a function that will return true if the cell is empty and has an associated formula? Thanks for the time, alex |
isBlank()
On Feb 8, 11:37 am, "Pete_UK" wrote:
Try this: =IF(A1="","blank but not empty","contains something else") Hope this helps. Pete On Feb 8, 4:33 pm, "alex" wrote: Hello experts, I'm trying to use the isBlank() function to in one cell to reference another directly to the right. Problem is, however, that said cell to the right, while holding a null value, also has a formula causing the isBlank function to return false. Is there a function that will return true if the cell is empty and has an associated formula? Thanks for the time, alex- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Pete, You helped answer my question: instead of using isBlank, I used "". Thanks. |
isBlank()
Thanks for the feedback - glad to help.
Pete On Feb 8, 4:49 pm, "alex" wrote: On Feb 8, 11:37 am, "Pete_UK" wrote: Try this: =IF(A1="","blank but not empty","contains something else") Hope this helps. Pete On Feb 8, 4:33 pm, "alex" wrote: Hello experts, I'm trying to use the isBlank() function to in one cell to reference another directly to the right. Problem is, however, that said cell to the right, while holding a null value, also has a formula causing the isBlank function to return false. Is there a function that will return true if the cell is empty and has an associated formula? Thanks for the time, alex- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Pete, You helped answer my question: instead of using isBlank, I used "". Thanks.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - |
isBlank()
JE McGimpsey wrote...
Blank means blank, not containing a formula. .... To be fair, this is one of Microsoft's more boneheaded mistakes. ISBLANK likely got its name from the mnemonic returned by CELL("Type",SomeRange), which returns "b" when the top-left cell in SomeRange has nothing in it. Microsoft was able to figure out ISTEXT rather than ISLABEL despite the fact that CELL("Type",...) returns "l" (lower case L) when the top-left cell evaluates as a text string. Further, most non-English variants of the ISBLANK function have names that translate back into English as ISEMPTY. And, FWLIW, the equivalent Lotus 123 function is named @ISEMPTY. |
isBlank()
In article . com,
"Harlan Grove" wrote: To be fair, this is one of Microsoft's more boneheaded mistakes. And that's saying a lot... |
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