S
sephiroths816
Ok, so I'm not sure if this is even possible. But it seems every time
I think that may be the case, another skilled Excel user on this forum
proves me wrong.
I'm trying to conditionally format a row.
Assume:
Row 1 contains data (some columns consisting of a 0 value or for
accounting it has the $ - to represent the 0 value)
Row 2 contains data
However,
Row 3 contains NO data
But then,
Row 4 contains data
I can get the row to conditionally format due to the value of one cell
(I basically condition it to do a no color and no border lines to make
for clean presentation). However, if you conditionally format the row,
the cells at 0 values, also follow that conditional format. While I'm
glad they the conditional format are working, I don't want the 0
values to follow it. Only the blank values.
I think my ultimate goal is to get the effect that Rows 1 and 2 are
grouped together as one group, skip a row and Row 4 begins a group and
so on.
Another thing I noticed with the conditional format is that it limits
you on the strength of the borders. It maximumally allows you to use
the default thin lines, when I may want a thicker line. Is there a way
around that?
Let me know guys.
I think that may be the case, another skilled Excel user on this forum
proves me wrong.
I'm trying to conditionally format a row.
Assume:
Row 1 contains data (some columns consisting of a 0 value or for
accounting it has the $ - to represent the 0 value)
Row 2 contains data
However,
Row 3 contains NO data
But then,
Row 4 contains data
I can get the row to conditionally format due to the value of one cell
(I basically condition it to do a no color and no border lines to make
for clean presentation). However, if you conditionally format the row,
the cells at 0 values, also follow that conditional format. While I'm
glad they the conditional format are working, I don't want the 0
values to follow it. Only the blank values.
I think my ultimate goal is to get the effect that Rows 1 and 2 are
grouped together as one group, skip a row and Row 4 begins a group and
so on.
Another thing I noticed with the conditional format is that it limits
you on the strength of the borders. It maximumally allows you to use
the default thin lines, when I may want a thicker line. Is there a way
around that?
Let me know guys.