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Determining a Value of a Cell

 

Counting Colors from Conditional Formats

Summary: Conditional formatting is a great way to make sure that your information looks a particular way, even if the information changes. If you want to determine the color of cells whose color is based on a conditional format, then you are in for quite a bit of work. (This tip works with Microsoft Excel 97, Excel 2000, Excel 2002, Excel 2003, and Excel 2007.)

Ronald has a worksheet that utilizes conditional formatting. The conditions result in the cells being different colors. He wants to count the number of cells that are red in the worksheet. He knows how to create a macro that will examine the cell color and do a count if a cell is formatted directly as red, but the macro won't work with cells that are conditionally formatted. Ronald wants to know if there is a way to count these conditionally red cells, as well.

You cannot directly check in a macro what the color of a cell is based on a conditional format. There are ways you can work around this with a macro, but it is not for the faint-of-heart. The following page on Chip Pearson's site demonstrates the difficulty in determining conditional colors:

http://www.cpearson.com/excel/CFColors.htm

Given the difficulty of the task, it may just be easier to recreate the conditions within the macro, and then see which cells meet these conditions. The result is that you count cells matching conditions rather than count cells that are colored red as a result of those conditions. This should yield the same count of cells, but is much easier to handle programmatically.

Of course, the only caveat to this solution is that you will need to keep the conditions in the macro and the conditions in the conditional formats in sync with each other. If you change one and fail to change the other, then you won't get the desired results.

ExcelTips is your source for cost-effective Microsoft Excel training. This tip (2873) applies to Microsoft Excel versions: 97 | 2000 | 2002 | 2003 | 2007

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