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John Wirt

Conditional formatting--simple question
 
Why does this conditional formating statement not work?

="IF(C13<D13,1,0)"

WHen I apply this conditional format to a cell in G13, it has no effect on
the format of the number in G13. The format is to cross-hatch the cell
pattern if the condition is true.

I have tried, "IF(C13<D13,1,0)," which makes no difference.

Thank you.

John Wirt



Bernard Liengme

Conditional formatting--simple question
 
I think you are misunderstanding Conditional Formatting. This of it as <if
this formula is true then <use this format. Your formula gives a numeric
value not a Boolean one.
So, with G13 selected, open the Conditional Formatting dialog and enter
=C13<D13 as your formula, then set formatting.
best wishes
--
Bernard V Liengme
www.stfx.ca/people/bliengme
remove caps from email

"John Wirt" wrote in message
...
Why does this conditional formating statement not work?

="IF(C13<D13,1,0)"

WHen I apply this conditional format to a cell in G13, it has no effect on
the format of the number in G13. The format is to cross-hatch the cell
pattern if the condition is true.

I have tried, "IF(C13<D13,1,0)," which makes no difference.

Thank you.

John Wirt





Biff

Conditional formatting--simple question
 
Hi!

You don't need the quotes around the formula. Sometimes under certain
conditions the cf user form does that. You can just edit those out.

Or, use this formula:

=C13<D13

Biff

"John Wirt" wrote in message
...
Why does this conditional formating statement not work?

="IF(C13<D13,1,0)"

WHen I apply this conditional format to a cell in G13, it has no effect on
the format of the number in G13. The format is to cross-hatch the cell
pattern if the condition is true.

I have tried, "IF(C13<D13,1,0)," which makes no difference.

Thank you.

John Wirt





Ron Rosenfeld

Conditional formatting--simple question
 
On Sun, 5 Feb 2006 13:29:47 -0500, "John Wirt" wrote:

Why does this conditional formating statement not work?

="IF(C13<D13,1,0)"

WHen I apply this conditional format to a cell in G13, it has no effect on
the format of the number in G13. The format is to cross-hatch the cell
pattern if the condition is true.

I have tried, "IF(C13<D13,1,0)," which makes no difference.

Thank you.

John Wirt


The enclosed double quotes causes Excel to treat your "formula" as a string of
text. So it will only match if G13 contains that text AND if you are using the
Cell Value Is option.

What you probably want is the Formula Is: option.

In addition, since all you need is something that will return TRUE or FALSE, it
would be simpler to use the formula:

=C13<D13

instead of the IF(...) formual.


--ron

Biff

Conditional formatting--simple question
 
You can use formulas that evaluate to a numeric value.

If the formula evaluates to zero, that's "considered" FALSE. If the formula
evaluates to any other number (including negatives), it's "considered" TRUE.

Biff

"Bernard Liengme" wrote in message
...
I think you are misunderstanding Conditional Formatting. This of it as <if
this formula is true then <use this format. Your formula gives a numeric
value not a Boolean one.
So, with G13 selected, open the Conditional Formatting dialog and enter
=C13<D13 as your formula, then set formatting.
best wishes
--
Bernard V Liengme
www.stfx.ca/people/bliengme
remove caps from email

"John Wirt" wrote in message
...
Why does this conditional formating statement not work?

="IF(C13<D13,1,0)"

WHen I apply this conditional format to a cell in G13, it has no effect
on
the format of the number in G13. The format is to cross-hatch the cell
pattern if the condition is true.

I have tried, "IF(C13<D13,1,0)," which makes no difference.

Thank you.

John Wirt








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