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alternate for Trace precedent
I have to enter various figures of work load volume and hourly rates in
various worksheets, at the end I have to run the macro to calculate the billing amount. The cell which gives me the billing amount is named & I dont see any formula written there, can I just see the value in formula bar? Problem is that the one who developed this file had left & secondly our nature of business is changing, we just want to see how billing amount is worked out. Any help will be appreciated. |
alternate for Trace precedent
Not sure what you are looking for...
In any cell enter (in the same row, as most likely it will point to a range) =Billing_Amount assuming Billing_Amount is the name given to 'billing amount' "zen" wrote: I have to enter various figures of work load volume and hourly rates in various worksheets, at the end I have to run the macro to calculate the billing amount. The cell which gives me the billing amount is named & I dont see any formula written there, can I just see the value in formula bar? Problem is that the one who developed this file had left & secondly our nature of business is changing, we just want to see how billing amount is worked out. Any help will be appreciated. |
alternate for Trace precedent
If the value in the cell changes but you don't have formulas in the cells,
only the values, then in suggests that there are macros doing the calculations. Press Alt+F11, and in the Project window for your file (top left side), start by opening any Module folders associated with your file name. If you don't find anything or there is no Module folder, double-click each of the sheet names in the Project window and the thisWorksheet object and note if there is any VBA code. -- If this helps, please click the Yes button. Cheers, Shane Devenshire "zen" wrote: I have to enter various figures of work load volume and hourly rates in various worksheets, at the end I have to run the macro to calculate the billing amount. The cell which gives me the billing amount is named & I dont see any formula written there, can I just see the value in formula bar? Problem is that the one who developed this file had left & secondly our nature of business is changing, we just want to see how billing amount is worked out. Any help will be appreciated. |
alternate for Trace precedent
Hi,
I forgot to ask - you mention Trace Precedents in your title but you don't address it in the body of the post - how does this come into play in your question. -- If this helps, please click the Yes button. Cheers, Shane Devenshire "zen" wrote: I have to enter various figures of work load volume and hourly rates in various worksheets, at the end I have to run the macro to calculate the billing amount. The cell which gives me the billing amount is named & I dont see any formula written there, can I just see the value in formula bar? Problem is that the one who developed this file had left & secondly our nature of business is changing, we just want to see how billing amount is worked out. Any help will be appreciated. |
alternate for Trace precedent
Hi,
If the formula is not visible, then another possibility could be that the formula has been hidden by Format cell Protection Hidden and then the sheet has been protected. If this is indeed the case, then you will need the password to unprotect and then uncheck the Hidden box -- Regards, Ashish Mathur Microsoft Excel MVP www.ashishmathur.com "zen" wrote in message ... I have to enter various figures of work load volume and hourly rates in various worksheets, at the end I have to run the macro to calculate the billing amount. The cell which gives me the billing amount is named & I dont see any formula written there, can I just see the value in formula bar? Problem is that the one who developed this file had left & secondly our nature of business is changing, we just want to see how billing amount is worked out. Any help will be appreciated. |
alternate for Trace precedent
Trace precedent was the first thing I tried to use, but it didn't work. So I
was looking for alternatives. "Shane Devenshire" wrote: Hi, I forgot to ask - you mention Trace Precedents in your title but you don't address it in the body of the post - how does this come into play in your question. -- If this helps, please click the Yes button. Cheers, Shane Devenshire "zen" wrote: I have to enter various figures of work load volume and hourly rates in various worksheets, at the end I have to run the macro to calculate the billing amount. The cell which gives me the billing amount is named & I dont see any formula written there, can I just see the value in formula bar? Problem is that the one who developed this file had left & secondly our nature of business is changing, we just want to see how billing amount is worked out. Any help will be appreciated. |
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