How do I set up a conditional cell from a drop down list in Excel

M

Mon

I'm working on creating an Expense Form in Excel for the employees in my
company. In cell A7 I have a drop down list consisting of: mileage,
conference, school, seminar, meetings. The following columns or cells of
C,D,E,F,G,H,I - I would like to be conditioned upon the response of the drop
down list. If "mileage" is chosen, is it possible that cells G7,H7, and I7
will gray out and cells C7,D7,E7 and F7 will highlight themselves to be
filled in by the employee. - ??
Any help would be great!!
 
S

SteveG

You could do this using Conditional Formatting and Data validation.

Select cells C7:F7 and add the conditional format of:

Formula is: =$A$7="Mileage"

I selected to fill in Yellow and added the border.

Condition 2:

Formula is: =$A$7<>"Mileage"

I selected to fill in gray with no borders.

Apply the same methodology G:I to highlight or gray out based on th
value in A7. You can use the OR function in your Conditional Forma
formula to accomodate for multiple conditions resulting in the sam
format.

To further restrict your users, you can utilize the data vaildation.
Select C7:F7 and select Data Validation>Allow = Custom and enter

=$A$7="Mileage"

in the formula Bar. This will not allow users to put any data in thos
cells if A7 is not = to Mileage.

Cheers,

Stev
 
M

Mon

How do I place the Formula: =$A$7="Mileage" in Conditional Formatting??

I think I'm confused.

Thanks for your help!!
 
S

SteveG

Mon,

Select: Format>Conditional Formatting. The default for Condition 1 is
"Cell Value Is". There is a dropdown arrow in that cell. When you
click on the drop down, the other option is "Formula Is". Select that
and the Formula Bar will appear to the right. Click on the formula bar
and type = then select cell A7 (it will appear in your formula bar
automatically with the $'s) then type ="Mileage" after $A$7.

Remember that in order for the conditional format to apply to all the
cells you want, you need to select them all before going to
Format>Conditional Formatting.

Hope this clears it up for you.

Regards,

Steve
 

Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments. After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.

Ask a Question

Top