Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.worksheet.functions
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 8
Default "This cell is inconsistent with the column formula" error

I get no results from a Google search on this message searched as a phrase,
yet that is word-for-word what Excel is telling me.

Seems simple: I have two worksheets containing tables, "Goal 1" and "Master
List".

In Goal 1:B9, data are entered manually.

In Master List:B9, the formula is simply "='Goal 1'!B9."

Yet when I click on Master List:B9, an exclamation mark appears to the left,
and when I hover over it, it says "This cell is inconsistent with the column
formula."

Is this something unique about references to tables (I've not worked with
tables before)?

Thanks,

~N
  #2   Report Post  
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.worksheet.functions
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 523
Default "This cell is inconsistent with the column formula" error

I'd guess that the formulas in Master List B8 & B10 are similar (ie, if you
copied B8 down to B10 B10 wouldn't change) and excel is trying to warn you
that may have an error in your formula.

If the formula is correct you can choose to ignore the warning.

Sam

"Nebulous" wrote:

I get no results from a Google search on this message searched as a phrase,
yet that is word-for-word what Excel is telling me.

Seems simple: I have two worksheets containing tables, "Goal 1" and "Master
List".

In Goal 1:B9, data are entered manually.

In Master List:B9, the formula is simply "='Goal 1'!B9."

Yet when I click on Master List:B9, an exclamation mark appears to the left,
and when I hover over it, it says "This cell is inconsistent with the column
formula."

Is this something unique about references to tables (I've not worked with
tables before)?

Thanks,

~N

  #3   Report Post  
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.worksheet.functions
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 8
Default "This cell is inconsistent with the column formula" error

THanks Sam. B9 is the first cell in the column that uses a formula. But I did
drag and fill the B9 formula to the end of the column.

Seems like a strange error message (doesn't appear to make sense), and I was
weirded out that it doesn't appear anywhere online.

I appreciate your input.

jb

"Sam Wilson" wrote:

I'd guess that the formulas in Master List B8 & B10 are similar (ie, if you
copied B8 down to B10 B10 wouldn't change) and excel is trying to warn you
that may have an error in your formula.

If the formula is correct you can choose to ignore the warning.

Sam

"Nebulous" wrote:

I get no results from a Google search on this message searched as a phrase,
yet that is word-for-word what Excel is telling me.

Seems simple: I have two worksheets containing tables, "Goal 1" and "Master
List".

In Goal 1:B9, data are entered manually.

In Master List:B9, the formula is simply "='Goal 1'!B9."

Yet when I click on Master List:B9, an exclamation mark appears to the left,
and when I hover over it, it says "This cell is inconsistent with the column
formula."

Is this something unique about references to tables (I've not worked with
tables before)?

Thanks,

~N

  #4   Report Post  
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.worksheet.functions
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,059
Default "This cell is inconsistent with the column formula" error

"Nebulous" wrote:
Seems like a strange error message (doesn't appear to make sense),
and I was weirded out that it doesn't appear anywhere online.


Me, too. I am sure there are times that those "background error checking"
messages can be helpful. But 999 times out of 1000, they are a nuisance
distraction.

I disable them. In Excel 2003, click on Tools Options Error Checking.
Deselect (uncheck) "Enable background error checking", and click on Reset
Ignored Errors.


----- original message -----

"Nebulous" wrote in message
...
THanks Sam. B9 is the first cell in the column that uses a formula. But I
did
drag and fill the B9 formula to the end of the column.

Seems like a strange error message (doesn't appear to make sense), and I
was
weirded out that it doesn't appear anywhere online.

I appreciate your input.

jb

"Sam Wilson" wrote:

I'd guess that the formulas in Master List B8 & B10 are similar (ie, if
you
copied B8 down to B10 B10 wouldn't change) and excel is trying to warn
you
that may have an error in your formula.

If the formula is correct you can choose to ignore the warning.

Sam

"Nebulous" wrote:

I get no results from a Google search on this message searched as a
phrase,
yet that is word-for-word what Excel is telling me.

Seems simple: I have two worksheets containing tables, "Goal 1" and
"Master
List".

In Goal 1:B9, data are entered manually.

In Master List:B9, the formula is simply "='Goal 1'!B9."

Yet when I click on Master List:B9, an exclamation mark appears to the
left,
and when I hover over it, it says "This cell is inconsistent with the
column
formula."

Is this something unique about references to tables (I've not worked
with
tables before)?

Thanks,

~N


  #5   Report Post  
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.worksheet.functions
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 8
Default "This cell is inconsistent with the column formula" error

Thanks, and for the record I forgot to mention that this is Excel 2007.

I'll disable or ignore.

"JoeU2004" wrote:

"Nebulous" wrote:
Seems like a strange error message (doesn't appear to make sense),
and I was weirded out that it doesn't appear anywhere online.


Me, too. I am sure there are times that those "background error checking"
messages can be helpful. But 999 times out of 1000, they are a nuisance
distraction.

I disable them. In Excel 2003, click on Tools Options Error Checking.
Deselect (uncheck) "Enable background error checking", and click on Reset
Ignored Errors.


----- original message -----

"Nebulous" wrote in message
...
THanks Sam. B9 is the first cell in the column that uses a formula. But I
did
drag and fill the B9 formula to the end of the column.

Seems like a strange error message (doesn't appear to make sense), and I
was
weirded out that it doesn't appear anywhere online.

I appreciate your input.

jb

"Sam Wilson" wrote:

I'd guess that the formulas in Master List B8 & B10 are similar (ie, if
you
copied B8 down to B10 B10 wouldn't change) and excel is trying to warn
you
that may have an error in your formula.

If the formula is correct you can choose to ignore the warning.

Sam

"Nebulous" wrote:

I get no results from a Google search on this message searched as a
phrase,
yet that is word-for-word what Excel is telling me.

Seems simple: I have two worksheets containing tables, "Goal 1" and
"Master
List".

In Goal 1:B9, data are entered manually.

In Master List:B9, the formula is simply "='Goal 1'!B9."

Yet when I click on Master List:B9, an exclamation mark appears to the
left,
and when I hover over it, it says "This cell is inconsistent with the
column
formula."

Is this something unique about references to tables (I've not worked
with
tables before)?

Thanks,

~N





Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Ouch! Inconsistent TEXT("hh:mm") rounding JoeU2004 Excel Worksheet Functions 0 August 26th 09 07:21 PM
Formula Result is "V6", need Excel to use cell "V6", not the resul Erik Excel Worksheet Functions 3 September 5th 08 03:10 PM
Excel - Golf - how to display "-2" as "2 Under" or "4"as "+4" or "4 Over" in a calculation cell Steve Kay Excel Discussion (Misc queries) 2 August 8th 08 01:54 AM
Need Formula or macro. If i enter today date in the cell (Row 1,Column 2) and on tab out, the column 1 cell should be filled with "corresponding Day" of the date kakasay Excel Discussion (Misc queries) 1 January 22nd 07 12:31 PM
VBA setting formula for a cell causes "Wrong data type" error undercups Excel Discussion (Misc queries) 4 September 17th 06 10:14 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 06:55 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2025 ExcelBanter.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about Microsoft Excel"