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Making the Formula Bar Persistent
If you are using Excel to analyze a group of cells containing text, you may want to determine the number of cells that contain uppercase, the number that contain lowercase, and the number that contain mixed case. There are two ways you can approach this task: Using a regular worksheet formula, or defining your own user-defined function.
If the text you want to evaluate is in column A, starting at cell A1, you could use the following formula in cell B1:
=IF(A1>"",IF(EXACT(UPPER(A1),A1),"Upper", IF(EXACT(LOWER(A1),A1),"Lower","Mixed")),"")
The formula checks to see if there is anything in A1. If there is, then it uses the EXACT function to compare the contents to various conversions of the cell's contents. The formula returns an empty string if cell A1 is empty or the words Upper, Lower, or Mixed.
Copy the formula down column B as far as you need to, and then you can use the following type of formula to determine the count:
=COUNTIF(B:B,"Upper")
To find the count of lowercase or mixed-case cells, replace "Upper" with "Lower" or "Mixed".
Obviously, using formulas in this manner involves adding a column to your worksheet. There is another formula approach you can use that doesn't involve the use of an intermediate column in this manner. Consider the following formula, which returns the number of cells in the range A1:A100 that contain only uppercase letters:
=SUMPRODUCT(--(EXACT(A1:A100,UPPER(A1:A100))),--(A1:A100<>""))
A variation on this formula can be used to return the number of lowercase cells. The only thing that is changed in the following is the use of the LOWER function instead of the UPPER function:
=SUMPRODUCT(--(EXACT(A1:A100,LOWER(A1:A100))),--(A1:A100<>""))
To determine cells containing mixed case, you need to come up with a mix of the two SUMPRODUCT-based formulas:
=SUMPRODUCT(--(NOT(EXACT(A1:A100,UPPER(A1:A100)))),-- (NOT(EXACT(A1:A100,LOWER(A1:A100)))),--(A1:A100<>""))
There are some drawbacks to these formulas, drawbacks that aren't evident in the earlier formulas. First, if a cell contains a numeric value, then these formulas count the cell as uppercase. Second, if a cell contains an error value, then the formula returns an error.
If you have the need to count case quite often, then you would probably be better served by creating a user-defined function that does the counting for you. There are many ways that such a function could be written, but the general guidelines are the following:
The following macro is one example of how the above can be implemented:
Function CountCase(rng As Range, sCase As String) As Long
Dim vValue
Dim lUpper As Long
Dim lMixed As Long
Dim lLower As Long
Dim rCell As Range
lUpper = 0
lLower = 0
lMixed = 0
For Each rCell In rng
If Not IsError(rCell.Value) Then
vValue = rCell.Value
If VarType(vValue) = vbString _
And Trim(vValue) <> "" Then
If vValue = UCase(vValue) Then
lUpper = lUpper + 1
ElseIf vValue = LCase(vValue) Then
lLower = lLower + 1
Else
lMixed = lMixed + 1
End If
End If
End If
Next
Select Case UCase(sCase)
Case "U"
CountCase = lUpper
Case "L"
CountCase = lLower
Case "M"
CountCase = lMixed
Case Else
CountCase = CVErr(xlErrValue)
End Select
End Function
Determining if a cell is upper, lower, or mixed case is obviously the crux of a macro such as this. Making such a determination uses the same process as was done in the worksheet formulas: compare the contents of the cell to the uppercase or lowercase conversion of those contents. In this macro the value of the cell (vValue) is compared to vValue transformed with either the UCase or LCase function.
The function also ignores cells that it doesn't make sense to evaluate. It ignores cells containing numeric values, Boolean values, error values, empty cells, and cells that contain only spaces. If a numeric value is formatted as text, then the function counts that cell as uppercase. To use this user-defined function, use a formula such as the following in your worksheet:
=COUNTCASE(A1:A100, "L")
For the first argument you use the range you want evaluated. The second argument is a single character—L, M, or U—indicating which count you want returned. If you use some other value for the second argument, then the function returns an error.
ExcelTips is your source for cost-effective Microsoft Excel training. This tip (3212) applies to Microsoft Excel versions: 97 2000 2002 2003 2007
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