Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.worksheet.functions
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I posted this question once today in the general Excel group, but am
reposting here just in case someone might have some info. Sorry if you read this already. I tried to cross-post here and it didnt work originally... I am wondering if anyone knows, is there a way to format a cell based on it's value using an IF statement? For example I want to enter a worksheet function that would change a cells font color to red if it exceeds a certain value. =if(A22, change fornt to red, do nothing) I am not looking to do this in VBA do to the various range sizes and shapes that i would have to reference (would be a nightmare), and I dont want to use conditional formatting either. It would be fine and easy to use conditional formatting, but the cells I am trying to evaluate are on different tabs (wont let me link the formula to other tabs), and the structure of spreadhseet is such that there are literally hundreds maybe thousands of cells that this should be applied to. It will be no small task to try and use the conditional formatting wozard, lets put it that way. Ideally, I would just like to have a simple IF function that I can copy and paste and find and replace get other people here to use also. Is there anyway to do this via an IF and skip the conditional formatting wizard? Any help is greatly appreciated! BTW - I am using Excel 2000 |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
If Statement/Conditional Formatting | Excel Worksheet Functions | |||
formatting a cell with a function (IF statement) | Excel Worksheet Functions | |||
Formatting a cell with a function (IF statement) | Excel Worksheet Functions | |||
=IF Statement formula or conditional formatting | Excel Worksheet Functions | |||
How do I check formatting in an if-then statement | Excel Worksheet Functions |