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SYMPTOMSIn Microsoft Excel 97, if you apply conditional formatting to a range of cells, the conditional formatting may unexpectedly be displayed in cells in the range that contain text. CAUSEThis problem may occur if you apply a conditional format that uses "greater than," "greater than or equal to," "not equal to," or "not between." For example: Cell Value Is greater than 5Specifically, the problem occurs because any text string has a value greater than any number in Microsoft Excel. Microsoft Excel 97 does not account for this fact when you use conditional formatting. WORKAROUNDIf You Are Using "Greater Than" or "Greater Than or Equal To"To prevent this problem from occurring, use "between" instead of "greater than" or "greater than or equal to" when you apply a conditional format to a range of cells.When you use "between," you must enter two values:
When you do this, the conditional formatting is not displayed in cells that
contain text.
If You Are Using "Not Equal To" or "Not Between"To prevent this problem from occurring, do not apply conditional formatting that uses either "not equal to" or "not between" to a cell that contains text.STATUSThis behavior is by design of Microsoft Excel 97. MORE INFORMATIONIn Microsoft Excel 97, you can use conditional formatting to force cells within a range to use specific formatting if certain conditions are true. For example, you can use conditional formatting to force all cells whose values are greater than 100 to appear in a bold, red font. To apply conditional formatting to a range of cells, select the range of cells, and click Conditional Formatting on the Format menu. Additional query words: XL97
Keywords : xlformat |
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