Ken said:
Can you not just use the same logic that colours it within a formula?
=SUMPRODUCT(--ISNUMBER(MATCH(D3
400;$AL$3:$AR$3;0)))
Thanks for the answer, I try to explain in English.
Nobody of the suggested methods seems to work in my case, if I have
understood.
The method of Bob Phillips why i use the list separator semicolon (
in
the formulas, instead of comma (,) , therefore it gives back # value! in
result cell.
Your formula why my comparison is made only for row, and i comparison every
single cell with a range (AL:AR) of the same fixed row .
=ISNUMBER(MATCH(D2;$AL2:$AR2;0)) =ISNUMBER(MATCH(E2;$AL2:$AR2;0))
=ISNUMBER(MATCH(F2;$AL2:$AR2;0))
=ISNUMBER(MATCH(D3;$AL3:$AR3;0))
=ISNUMBER(MATCH(E3;$AL3:$AR3;0))=ISNUMBER(MATCH(F3;$AL3:$AR3;0))
.....
I don't know if exist an other solution without conditional formatting for
this problem: knowing the number of cells in a column, that cell is equal to
range in the row.
The my real rows are thousand approximately every 2-4 months.
For now i have characterized 3 solutions:
1) to count them by hand .
2) change the settings of the computer and try to use Bob Phillips formulas.
3) to wait for until 2006 office 12 , sort and filter by color ( count color
will be better), fantastic for a profane like me.
--
Regards
Ken....................... Microsoft MVP - Excel
Sys Spec - Win XP Pro / XL 97/00/02/03
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