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Converting to Octal

Filtering Columns for Unique Values

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Creating a Drawing Object

Determining a Value of a Cell

Understanding Macros

 

Editing a Comment Close to Its Cell

Summary: Have you ever tried to edit your comments, only to find that Excel displays them some distance from the cell to which they are attached? This happens more often than you might think. This tip explores some of the possible causes and provides some ideas on how you can fix the problem. (This tip works with Microsoft Excel 97, Excel 2000, Excel 2002, Excel 2003, and Excel 2007.)

Peggy has several cells in a worksheet that have comments associated with them. When she right-clicks on one of these cells, she can choose Edit Comment from the resulting Context menu in order to edit the comment. If the comment was one she created in a previous session with Excel, it is not unusual for the comment to open up elsewhere in the worksheet, sometimes several screens away. Peggy is wondering if there is a way to make the comment appear next to the cell it goes with.

This condition can be caused by several things. For instance, it is possible that while previously editing the comment, you clicked the comment box's border and dragged the comment to a different place on the worksheet. If you did this, then Excel remembers where the comment was moved to and always displays it in the remembered location.

Another common cause is that you do some filtering on your data, which results in some of the rows or columns being hidden while the filter is in place. If you then edit comments in the filtered cells, you have effectively "moved" the comment from the original location to a new location that is associated with the row or column visible on the screen. When you later remove the filter and try to edit the comment, it remembers where it was previously edited, and that is where the new editing opportunity takes place.

In both of these instances, the normal solution is to just grin and bear it—manually move the cells from where they are to where you want them. However, if you have this problem with a lot of cells, all the manual moving can be a real bother. In that case, you may want to use a macro to do the moving for you.

Sub MoveComments()
  Dim cmt As Comment
  For Each cmt In ActiveSheet.Comments
    With cmt
      .Shape.Top = .Parent.Top
      .Shape.Left = .Parent.Offset(0, 1).Left
    End With
  Next
End Sub

This macro moves all the comments in a worksheet so that their upper-left corner is the same as the upper-right corner of the cell to which they are attached. This puts the comments right next to their cells, which is where you want them.

ExcelTips is your source for cost-effective Microsoft Excel training. This tip (3269) applies to Microsoft Excel versions: 97 | 2000 | 2002 | 2003 | 2007

More Power! For some people, the prospect of creating macros can be scary. Those who conquer their fears, however, find they become much more confident and productive once they learn how to make Excel do exactly what they want. ExcelTips: The Macros is an invaluable source for learning Excel macros. You are introduced to the topic in bite-sized chunks, pulled from past issues of ExcelTips. Learn at your own pace, exactly the way you want.
 
Check out ExcelTips: The Macros today!