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Adding a Little Animation to Your Life
Converting a Range of URLs to Hyperlinks
Making the Formula Bar Persistent
Lori has a series of numbers, in adjacent cells, that can be either positive or negative. She would like a way to determine the largest sequence of negative numbers in the range. Thus, if there were seven negative numbers in a row in this sequence, she would like a formula that would return the value 7.
We've looked high and low and can't find a single formula that will do what is wanted. You can, however, do it with an intermediate column. For instance, if you have your numbers in column A (beginning in A1), then you could put the following formula in cell B1:
=IF(A1<0,1,0)
Then, in cell B2 enter the following:
=IF(A2<0,B1+1,0)
Copy this down to all the other cells in column B for which there is a value in column A. Then, in a different cell (perhaps cell C1) you can put the following formula:
=MAX(B:B)
This value will represent the largest number of consecutive negative values in column A.
If you don't want to create an intermediate column to get the answer, you could create a user-defined function that will return the value.
Function MaxNegSequence(rng As Range)
' search for the largest sequence
' of negative numbers in the range
Dim c As Range
Dim lCounter As Long
Dim lMaxCount As Long
Application.Volatile
lCounter = 0
lMaxCount = 0
On Error Resume Next
For Each c In rng.Cells
If c.Value < 0 Then
lCounter = lCounter + 1
If lCounter > lMaxCount Then
lMaxCount = lCounter
End If
Else
lCounter = 0
End If
Next c
MaxNegSequence = lMaxCount
End Function
To use the function, just place a formula similar to the following in your worksheet:
= MaxNegSequence(A1:A512)
ExcelTips is your source for cost-effective Microsoft Excel training. This tip (3533) applies to Microsoft Excel versions: 97 2000 2002 2003 2007
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