Conditional formatting can help make patterns and trends in your data more apparent. To use it, you create rules that determine the format of cells based on their values, such as the following monthly temperature data with cell colors tied to cell values.
You can apply conditional formatting to a range of cells (either a selection or a named range), an Excel table, and in Excel for Windows, even a PivotTable report.
Conditional formatting typically works the same way in a range of cells, an Excel table, or a PivotTable report. However, conditional formatting in a PivotTable report has some extra considerations:
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There are some conditional formats that don’t work with fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report. For example, you can’t format such fields based on whether they contain unique or duplicate values. These restrictions are mentioned in the remaining sections of this article, where applicable.
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If you change the layout of the PivotTable report by filtering, hiding levels, collapsing and expanding levels, or moving a field, the conditional format is maintained as long as the fields in the underlying data are not removed.
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The scope of the conditional format for fields in the Values area can be based on the data hierarchy and is determined by all the visible children (the next lower level in a hierarchy) of a parent (the next higher level in a hierarchy) on rows for one or more columns, or columns for one or more rows.
Note: In the data hierarchy, children do not inherit conditional formatting from the parent, and the parent does not inherit conditional formatting from the children.
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There are three methods for scoping the conditional format of fields in the Values area: by selection, by corresponding field, and by value field.
The default method of scoping fields in the Values area is by selection. You can change the scoping method to the corresponding field or value field by using the Apply formatting rule to option button, the New Formatting Rule dialog box, or the Edit Formatting Rule dialog box.
Method |
Use this method if you want to select |
Scoping by selection |
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Scoping by value field |
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Scoping by corresponding field |
When you conditionally format fields in the Values area for top, bottom, above average, or below average values, the rule is based on all visible values by default. However, when you scope by corresponding field, instead of using all visible values, you can apply the conditional format for each combination of:
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Note: Quick Analysis is not available in Excel 2010 and previous versions.
Use the Quick Analysis button to apply selected conditional formatting to the selected data. The Quick Analysis button appears automatically when you select data.
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Select the data that you want to conditionally format. The Quick Analysis button appears on the lower-right corner of the selection.
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Click the Quick Analysis button , or press Ctrl+Q.
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In the pop-up that appears, on the Formatting tab, move your mouse over the different options to see a Live Preview on your data, and then click on the formatting option you want.
Notes:
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The formatting options that appear in the Formatting tab depend on the data you have selected. If your selection contains only text, then the available options are Text, Duplicate, Unique, Equal To, and Clear. When the selection contains only numbers, or both text and numbers, then the options are Data Bars, Colors, Icon Sets, Greater, Top 10%, and Clear.
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Live preview will only render for those formatting options that can be used on your data. For example, if your selected cells don’t contain matching data and you select Duplicate, the live preview will not work.
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If the Text that Contains dialog box appears, enter the formatting option you want to apply and click OK.
If you’d like to watch a video that shows how to use Quick Analysis to apply conditional formatting, see Video: Use conditional formatting.
You can download a sample workbook that contains different examples of applying conditional formatting, both with standard rules such as top and bottom, duplicates, Data Bars, Icon Sets and Color Scales, as well as manually creating rules of your own.
Download: Conditional formatting examples in Excel
Color scales are visual guides that help you understand data distribution and variation. A two-color scale helps you compare a range of cells by using a gradation of two colors. The shade of the color represents higher or lower values. For example, in a green and yellow color scale, as shown below, you can specify that higher value cells have a more green color and lower value cells have a more yellow color.
Tip: You can sort cells that have this format by their color — just use the context menu.
Tip: If any cells in the selection contain a formula that returns an error, the conditional formatting is not applied to those cells. To ensure that the conditional formatting is applied to those cells, use an IS or IFERROR function to return a value other than an error value.
Quick formatting
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Select one or more cells in a range, table, or PivotTable report.
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On the Home tab, in the Styles group, click the arrow next to Conditional Formatting, and then click Color Scales.
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Select a two-color scale.
Hover over the color scale icons to see which icon is a two-color scale. The top color represents higher values, and the bottom color represents lower values.
You can change the method of scoping for fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report by using the Formatting Options button that appears next to a PivotTable field that has conditional formatting applied.
Advanced formatting
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Select one or more cells in a range, table, or PivotTable report.
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On the Home tab, in the Styles group, click the arrow next to Conditional Formatting, and then click Manage Rules. The Conditional Formatting Rules Manager dialog box appears.
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Do one of the following:
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To add a completely new conditional format, click New Rule. The New Formatting Rule dialog box appears.
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To add a new conditional format based on one that is already listed, select the rule, then click Duplicate Rule. The duplicate rule appears in the dialog box. Select the duplicate, then select Edit Rule. The Edit Formatting Rule dialog box appears.
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To change a conditional format, do the following:
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Make sure that the appropriate worksheet, table, or PivotTable report is selected in the Show formatting rules for list box.
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Optionally, change the range of cells by clicking Collapse Dialog in the Applies to box to temporarily hide the dialog box, by selecting the new range of cells on the worksheet, and then by selecting Expand Dialog.
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Select the rule, and then click Edit rule. The Edit Formatting Rule dialog box appears.
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Under Apply Rule To, to optionally change the scope for fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report by:
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Selection: Click Selected cells.
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All cells for a Value label: Click All cells showing <Value label> values.
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All cells for a Value label, excluding subtotals and the grand total: Click All cells showing <Value label> values for <Row Label>.
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Under Select a Rule Type, click Format all cells based on their values (default).
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Under Edit the Rule Description, in the Format Style list box, select 2-Color Scale.
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To select a type in the Type box for Minimum and Maximum, do one of the following:
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Format lowest and highest values: Select Lowest Value and Highest Value.
In this case, you do not enter a Minimum and MaximumValue.
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Format a number, date, or time value: Select Number and then enter a Minimum and MaximumValue.
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Format a percentage Percent: Enter a Minimum and MaximumValue.
Valid values are from 0 (zero) to 100. Don’t enter a percent sign.
Use a percentage when you want to visualize all values proportionally because the distribution of values is proportional.
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Format a percentile: Select Percentile and then enter a Minimum and MaximumValue. Valid percentiles are from 0 (zero) to 100.
Use a percentile when you want to visualize a group of high values (such as the top 20thpercentile) in one color grade proportion and low values (such as the bottom 20th percentile) in another color grade proportion, because they represent extreme values that might skew the visualization of your data.
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Format a formula result: Select Formula and then enter values for Minimum and Maximum.
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The formula must return a number, date, or time value.
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Start the formula with an equal sign (=).
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Invalid formulas result in no formatting being applied.
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It’s a good idea to test the formula to make sure that it doesn’t return an error value.
Notes:
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Make sure that the Minimum value is less than the Maximum value.
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You can choose a different type for the Minimum and Maximum. For example, you can choose a number for Minimum a percentage for Maximum.
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To choose a Minimum and Maximum color scale, click Color for each, and then select a color.
If you want to choose additional colors or create a custom color, click More Colors. The color scale you select is shown in the Preview box.
Color scales are visual guides that help you understand data distribution and variation. A three-color scale helps you compare a range of cells by using a gradation of three colors. The shade of the color represents higher, middle, or lower values. For example, in a green, yellow, and red color scale, you can specify that higher value cells have a green color, middle value cells have a yellow color, and lower value cells have a red color.
Tip: You can sort cells that have this format by their color — just use the context menu.
Quick formatting
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Select one or more cells in a range, table, or PivotTable report.
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On the Home tab, in the Styles group, click the arrow next to Conditional Formatting, and then click Color Scales.
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Select a three-color scale. The top color represents higher values, the center color represents middle values, and the bottom color represents lower values.
Hover over the color scale icons to see which icon is a three-color scale.
You can change the method of scoping for fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report by using the Formatting Options button that appears next to a PivotTable field that has conditional formatting applied..
Advanced formatting
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Select one or more cells in a range, table, or PivotTable report.
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On the Home tab, in the Styles group, click the arrow next to Conditional Formatting, and then click Manage Rules. The Conditional Formatting Rules Manager dialog box appears.
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Do one of the following:
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To add a new conditional format, click New Rule. The New Formatting Rule dialog box appears.
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To add a new conditional format based on one that is already listed, select the rule, then click Duplicate Rule. The duplicate rule is copied and appears in the dialog box. Select the duplicate, then select Edit Rule. The Edit Formatting Rule dialog box appears.
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To change a conditional format, do the following:
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Make sure that the appropriate worksheet, table, or PivotTable report is selected in the Show formatting rules for list box.
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Optionally, change the range of cells by clicking Collapse Dialog in the Applies to box to temporarily hide the dialog box, by selecting the new range of cells on the worksheet, and then by selecting Expand Dialog.
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Select the rule, and then click Edit rule. The Edit Formatting Rule dialog box appears.
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Under Apply Rule To, to optionally change the scope for fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report by:
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Selection: Click Just these cells.
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Corresponding field: Click All <value field> cells with the same fields.
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Value field: Click All <value field> cells.
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Under Select a Rule Type, click Format all cells based on their values.
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Under Edit the Rule Description, in the Format Style list box, select 3-Color Scale.
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Select a type for Minimum, Midpoint, and Maximum. Do one of the following:
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Format lowest and highest values: Select a Midpoint.
In this case, you do not enter a Lowest and HighestValue.
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Format a number, date, or time value: Select Number and then enter a value for Minimum, Midpoint, and Maximum.
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Format a percentage: Select Percent and then enter a value for Minimum, Midpoint, and Maximum. Valid values are from 0 (zero) to 100. Do not enter a percent (%) sign.
Use a percentage when you want to visualize all values proportionally, because using a percentage ensures that the distribution of values is proportional.
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Format a percentile: Select Percentile and then enter a value for Minimum, Midpoint, and Maximum.
Valid percentiles are from 0 (zero) to 100.
Use a percentile when you want to visualize a group of high values (such as the top 20th percentile) in one color grade proportion and low values (such as the bottom 20th percentile) in another color grade proportion, because they represent extreme values that might skew the visualization of your data.
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Format a formula result: Select Formula and then enter a value for Minimum, Midpoint, and Maximum.
The formula must return a number, date, or time value. Start the formula with an equal sign (=). Invalid formulas result in no formatting being applied. It’s a good idea to test the formula to make sure that it doesn’t return an error value.
Notes:
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You can set minimum, midpoint, and maximum values for the range of cells. Make sure that the value in Minimum is less than the value in Midpoint, which in turn is less than the value in Maximum.
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You can choose a different type for Minimum, Midpoint, and Maximum. For example, you can choose a Minimum number, Midpoint percentile, and Maximum percent.
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In many cases, the default Midpoint value of 50 percent works best, but you can adjust this to fit unique requirements.
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To choose a Minimum, Midpoint, and Maximum color scale, click Color for each, and then select a color.
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To choose additional colors or create a custom color, click More Colors.
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The color scale you select is shown in the Preview box.
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A data bar helps you see the value of a cell relative to other cells. The length of the data bar represents the value in the cell. A longer bar represents a higher value, and a shorter bar represents a lower value. Data bars are useful in spotting higher and lower numbers, especially with large amounts of data, such as top selling and bottom selling toys in a holiday sales report.
The example shown here uses data bars to highlight dramatic positive and negative values. You can format data bars so that the data bar starts in the middle of the cell, and stretches to the left for negative values.
Tip: If any cells in the range contain a formula that returns an error, the conditional formatting is not applied to those cells. To ensure that the conditional formatting is applied to those cells, use an IS or IFERROR function to return a value (such as 0 or «N/A») instead of an error value.
Quick formatting
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Select one or more cells in a range, table, or PivotTable report.
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On the Home tab, in the Style group, click the arrow next to Conditional Formatting, click Data Bars, and then select a data bar icon.
You can change the method of scoping for fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report by using the Apply formatting rule to option button.
Advanced formatting
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Select one or more cells in a range, table, or PivotTable report.
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On the Home tab, in the Styles group, click the arrow next to Conditional Formatting, and then click Manage Rules. The Conditional Formatting Rules Manager dialog box appears.
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Do one of the following:
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To add a conditional format, click New Rule. The New Formatting Rule dialog box appears.
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To add a new conditional format based on one that is already listed, select the rule, then click Duplicate Rule. The duplicate rule is copied and appears in the dialog box. Select the duplicate, then select Edit Rule. The Edit Formatting Rule dialog box appears.
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To change a conditional format, do the following:
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Make sure that the appropriate worksheet, table, or PivotTable report is selected in the Show formatting rules for list box.
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Optionally, change the range of cells by clicking Collapse Dialog in the Applies to box to temporarily hide the dialog box, by selecting the new range of cells on the worksheet, and then by selecting Expand Dialog.
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Select the rule, and then click Edit rule. The Edit Formatting Rule dialog box appears.
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Under Apply Rule To, to optionally change the scope for fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report by:
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Selection: Click Just these cells.
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Corresponding field: Click All <value field> cells with the same fields.
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Value field: Click All <value field> cells.
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Under Select a Rule Type, click Format all cells based on their values.
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Under Edit the Rule Description, in the Format Style list box, select Data Bar.
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Select a Minimum and MaximumType. Do one of the following:
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Format lowest and highest values: Select Lowest Value and Highest Value.
In this case, you do not enter a value for Minimum and Maximum.
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Format a number, date, or time value: Select Number and then enter a Minimum and MaximumValue.
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Format a percentage: Select Percent and then enter a value for Minimum and Maximum.
Valid values are from 0 (zero) to 100. Do not enter a percent (%) sign.
Use a percentage when you want to visualize all values proportionally, because using a percentage ensures that the distribution of values is proportional.
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Format a percentile Select Percentile and then enter a value for Minimum and Maximum.
Valid percentiles are from 0 (zero) to 100.
Use a percentile when you want to visualize a group of high values (such as the top 20th percentile) in one data bar proportion and low values (such as the bottom 20th percentile) in another data bar proportion, because they represent extreme values that might skew the visualization of your data.
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Format a formula result Select Formula, and then enter a value for Minimum and Maximum.
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The formula has to return a number, date, or time value.
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Start the formula with an equal sign (=).
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Invalid formulas result in no formatting being applied.
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It’s a good idea to test the formula to make sure that it doesn’t return an error value.
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Notes:
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Make sure that the Minimum value is less than the Maximum value.
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You can choose a different type for Minimum and Maximum. For example, you can choose a Minimum number and a Maximum percent.
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To choose a Minimum and Maximum color scale, click Bar Color.
If you want to choose additional colors or create a custom color, click More Colors. The bar color you select is shown in the Preview box.
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To show only the data bar and not the value in the cell, select Show Bar Only.
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To apply a solid border to data bars, select Solid Border in the Border list box and choose a color for the border.
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To choose between a solid bar and a gradiated bar, choose Solid Fill or Gradient Fill in the Fill list box.
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To format negative bars, click Negative Value and Axis and then, in the Negative Value and Axis Settings dialog box, choose options for the negative bar fill and border colors. You can choose position settings and a color for the axis. When you are finished selecting options, click OK.
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You can change the direction of bars by choosing a setting in the Bar Direction list box. This is set to Context by default, but you can choose between a left-to-right and a right-to-left direction, depending on how you want to present your data.
Use an icon set to annotate and classify data into three to five categories separated by a threshold value. Each icon represents a range of values. For example, in the 3 Arrows icon set, the green up arrow represents higher values, the yellow sideways arrow represents middle values, and the red down arrow represents lower values.
Tip: You can sort cells that have this format by their icon — just use the context menu.
The example shown here works with several examples of conditional formatting icon sets.
You can choose to show icons only for cells that meet a condition; for example, displaying a warning icon for those cells that fall below a critical value and no icons for those that exceed it. To do this, you hide icons by selecting No Cell Icon from the icon drop-down list next to the icon when you are setting conditions. You can also create your own combination of icon sets; for example, a green «symbol» check mark, a yellow «traffic light», and a red «flag.»
Tip: If any cells in the selection contain a formula that returns an error, the conditional formatting is not applied to those cells. To ensure that the conditional formatting is applied to those cells, use an IS or IFERROR function to return a value (such as 0 or «N/A») instead of an error value.
Quick formatting
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Select the cells that you want to conditionally format.
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On the Home tab, in the Style group, click the arrow next to Conditional Formatting, click Icon Set, and then select an icon set.
You can change the method of scoping for fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report by using the Apply formatting rule to option button.
Advanced formatting
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Select the cells that you want to conditionally format.
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On the Home tab, in the Styles group, click the arrow next to Conditional Formatting, and then click Manage Rules. The Conditional Formatting Rules Manager dialog box appears.
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Do one of the following:
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To add a conditional format, click New Rule. The New Formatting Rule dialog box appears.
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To add a new conditional format based on one that is already listed, select the rule, then click Duplicate Rule. The duplicate rule is copied and appears in the dialog box. Select the duplicate, then select Edit Rule. The Edit Formatting Rule dialog box appears.
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To change a conditional format, do the following:
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Make sure that the appropriate worksheet, table, or PivotTable report is selected in the Show formatting rules for list box.
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Optionally, change the range of cells by clicking Collapse Dialog in the Applies to box to temporarily hide the dialog box, by selecting the new range of cells on the worksheet, and then by selecting Expand Dialog.
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Select the rule, and then click Edit rule. The Edit Formatting Rule dialog box appears.
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Under Apply Rule To, to optionally change the scope for fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report by:
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Selection: Click Just these cells.
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Corresponding field: Click All <value field> cells with the same fields.
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Value field: Click All <value field> cells.
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Under Select a Rule Type, click Format all cells based on their values.
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Under Edit the Rule Description, in the Format Style list box, select Icon Set.
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Select an icon set. The default is 3 Traffic Lights (Unrimmed). The number of icons and the default comparison operators and threshold values for each icon can vary for each icon set.
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You can adjust the comparison operators and threshold values. The default range of values for each icon are equal in size, but you can adjust these to fit your unique requirements. Make sure that the thresholds are in a logical sequence of highest to lowest from top to bottom.
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Do one of the following:
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Format a number, date, or time value: Select Number.
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Format a percentage: Select Percent.
Valid values are from 0 (zero) to 100. Do not enter a percent (%) sign.
Use a percentage when you want to visualize all values proportionally, because using a percentage ensures that the distribution of values is proportional.
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Format a percentile: Select Percentile. Valid percentiles are from 0 (zero) to 100.
Use a percentile when you want to visualize a group of high values (such as the top 20th percentile) using a particular icon and low values (such as the bottom 20th percentile) using another icon, because they represent extreme values that might skew the visualization of your data.
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Format a formula result: Select Formula, and then enter a formula in each Value box.
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The formula must return a number, date, or time value.
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Start the formula with an equal sign (=).
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Invalid formulas result in no formatting being applied.
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It’s a good idea to test the formula to make sure that it doesn’t return an error value.
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To make the first icon represent lower values and the last icon represent higher values, select Reverse Icon Order.
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To show only the icon and not the value in the cell, select Show Icon Only.
Notes:
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You may need to adjust the column width to accommodate the icon.
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The size of the icon shown depends on the font size that is used in that cell. As the size of the font is increased, the size of the icon increases proportionally.
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To more easily find specific cells, you can format them by using a comparison operator. For example, in an inventory worksheet sorted by categories, you could highlight products with fewer than 10 items on hand in yellow. Or, in a retail store summary worksheet, you might identify all stores with profits greater than 10%, sales volumes less than $100,000, and region equal to «SouthEast.»
The examples shown here work with examples of built-in conditional formatting criteria, such as Greater Than, and Top %. This formats cities with a population greater than 2,000,000 with a green background and average high temperatures in the top 30% with orange.
Note: You cannot conditionally format fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report by text or by date, only by number.
Quick formatting
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Select one or more cells in a range, table, or PivotTable report.
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On the Home tab, in the Style group, click the arrow next to Conditional Formatting, and then click Highlight Cells Rules.
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Select the command you want, such as Between, Equal To Text that Contains, or A Date Occurring.
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Enter the values you want to use, and then select a format.
You can change the method of scoping for fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report by using the Apply formatting rule to option button.
If you’d like to watch videos of these techniques, see Video: Conditionally format text and Video: Conditionally format dates.
Advanced formatting
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Select one or more cells in a range, table, or PivotTable report.
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On the Home tab, in the Styles group, click the arrow next to Conditional Formatting, and then click Manage Rules. The Conditional Formatting Rules Manager dialog box appears.
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Do one of the following:
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To add a conditional format, click New Rule. The New Formatting Rule dialog box appears.
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To add a new conditional format based on one that is already listed, select the rule, then click Duplicate Rule. The duplicate rule is copied and appears in the dialog box. Select the duplicate, then select Edit Rule. The Edit Formatting Rule dialog box appears.
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To change a conditional format, do the following:
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Make sure that the appropriate worksheet, table, or PivotTable report is selected in the Show formatting rules for list box.
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Optionally, change the range of cells by clicking Collapse Dialog in the Applies to box to temporarily hide the dialog box, by selecting the new range of cells on the worksheet or on other worksheets, and then by selecting Expand Dialog.
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Select the rule, and then click Edit rule. The Edit Formatting Rule dialog box appears.
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Under Apply Rule To, to optionally change the scope for fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report by:
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Selection: Click Just these cells.
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Corresponding field: Click All <value field> cells with the same fields.
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Value field: Click All <value field> cells.
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Under Select a Rule Type, click Format only cells that contain.
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Under Edit the Rule Description, in the Format only cells with list box, do one of the following:
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Format by number, date, or time: Select Cell Value, select a comparison operator, and then enter a number, date, or time.
For example, select Between and then enter 100 and 200, or select Equal to and then enter 1/1/2009.
You can also enter a formula that returns a number, date, or time value.
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If you enter a formula, start it with an equal sign (=).
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Invalid formulas result in no formatting being applied.
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It’s a good idea to test the formula to make sure that it doesn’t return an error value.
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Format by text: Select Specific Text, choosing a comparison operator, and then enter text.
For example, select Contains and then enter Silver, or select Starting with and then enter Tri.
Quotes are included in the search string, and you may use wildcard characters. The maximum length of a string is 255 characters.
You can also enter a formula that returns text.
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If you enter a formula, start it with an equal sign (=).
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Invalid formulas result in no formatting being applied.
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It’s a good idea to test the formula to make sure that it doesn’t return an error value.
To see a video of this technique, see Video: Conditionally format text.
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Format by date: Select Dates Occurring and then select a date comparison.
For example, select Yesterday or Next week.
To see a video of this technique, see Video: Conditionally format dates.
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Format cells with blanks or no blanks: Select Blanks or No Blanks.
A blank value is a cell that contains no data and is different from a cell that contains one or more spaces (spaces are considered as text).
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Format cells with error or no error values: Select Errors or No Errors.
Error values include: #####, #VALUE!, #DIV/0!, #NAME?, #N/A, #REF!, #NUM!, and #NULL!.
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To specify a format, click Format. The Format Cells dialog box appears.
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Select the number, font, border, or fill format you want to apply when the cell value meets the condition, and then click OK.
You can choose more than one format. The formats you select are shown in the Preview box.
You can find the highest and lowest values in a range of cells that are based on a cutoff value you specify. For example, you can find the top 5 selling products in a regional report, the bottom 15% products in a customer survey, or the top 25 salaries in a department .
Quick formatting
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Select one or more cells in a range, table, or PivotTable report.
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On the Home tab, in the Style group, click the arrow next to Conditional Formatting, and then click Top/Bottom Rules.
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Select the command you want, such as Top 10 items or Bottom 10 %.
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Enter the values you want to use, and then select a format.
You can change the method of scoping for fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report by using the Apply formatting rule to option button.
Advanced formatting
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Select one or more cells in a range, table, or PivotTable report.
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On the Home tab, in the Styles group, click the arrow next to Conditional Formatting, and then click Manage Rules. The Conditional Formatting Rules Manager dialog box appears.
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Do one of the following:
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To add a conditional format, click New Rule. The New Formatting Rule dialog box appears.
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To add a new conditional format based on one that is already listed, select the rule, then click Duplicate Rule. The duplicate rule is copied and appears in the dialog box. Select the duplicate, then select Edit Rule. The Edit Formatting Rule dialog box appears.
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To change a conditional format, do the following:
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Make sure that the appropriate worksheet, table, or PivotTable report is selected in the Show formatting rules for list box.
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Optionally, change the range of cells by clicking Collapse Dialog in the Applies to box to temporarily hide the dialog box, by selecting the new range of cells on the worksheet, and then by selecting Expand Dialog.
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Select the rule, and then click Edit rule. The Edit Formatting Rule dialog box appears.
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Under Apply Rule To, to optionally change the scope fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report by:
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Selection: Click Just these cells.
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Corresponding field: Click All <value field> cells with the same fields.
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Value field: Click All <value field> cells.
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Under Select a Rule Type, click Format only top or bottom ranked values.
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Under Edit the Rule Description, in the Format values that rank in the list box, select Top or Bottom.
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Do one of the following:
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To specify a top or bottom number, enter a number and then clear the % of the selected range box. Valid values are 1 to 1000.
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To specify a top or bottom percentage, enter a number and then select the % of the selected range box. Valid values are 1 to 100.
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Optionally, change how the format is applied for fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report that are scoped by corresponding field.
By default, the conditional format is based on all visible values. However when you scope by corresponding field, instead of using all visible values, you can apply the conditional format for each combination of:
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A column and its parent row field, by selecting each Column group.
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A row and its parent column field, by selecting each Row group.
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To specify a format, click Format. The Format Cells dialog box appears.
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Select the number, font, border, or fill format you want to apply when the cell value meets the condition, and then click OK.
You can choose more than one format. The formats you select are shown in the Preview box.
You can find values above or below an average or standard deviation in a range of cells. For example, you can find the above average performers in an annual performance review or you can locate manufactured materials that fall below two standard deviations in a quality rating.
Quick formatting
-
Select one or more cells in a range, table, or PivotTable report.
-
On the Home tab, in the Style group, click the arrow next to Conditional Formatting, and then click Top/Bottom Rules.
-
Select the command you want, such as Above Average or Below Average.
-
Enter the values you want to use, and then select a format.
You can change the method of scoping for fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report by using the Apply formatting rule to option button.
Advanced formatting
-
Select one or more cells in a range, table, or PivotTable report.
-
On the Home tab, in the Styles group, click the arrow next to Conditional Formatting, and then click Manage Rules. The Conditional Formatting Rules Manager dialog box appears.
-
Do one of the following:
-
To add a conditional format, click New Rule. The New Formatting Rule dialog box appears.
-
To add a new conditional format based on one that is already listed, select the rule, then click Duplicate Rule. The duplicate rule is copied and appears in the dialog box. Select the duplicate, then select Edit Rule. The Edit Formatting Rule dialog box appears.
-
To change a conditional format, do the following:
-
-
Make sure that the appropriate worksheet, table, or PivotTable report is selected in the Show formatting rules for list box.
-
Optionally, change the range of cells by clicking Collapse Dialog in the Applies to box to temporarily hide the dialog box, by selecting the new range of cells on the worksheet, and then by selecting Expand Dialog.
-
Select the rule, and then click Edit rule. The Edit Formatting Rule dialog box appears.
-
-
-
Under Apply Rule To, to optionally change the scope for fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report by:
-
Selection: Click Just these cells.
-
Corresponding field: Click All <value field> cells with the same fields.
-
Value field: Click All <value field> cells.
-
-
Under Select a Rule Type, click Format only values that are above or below average.
-
Under Edit the Rule Description, in the Format values that are list box, do one of the following:
-
To format cells that are above or below the average for all of the cells in the range, select Above or Below.
-
To format cells that are above or below one, two, or three standard deviations for all of the cells in the range, select a standard deviation.
-
-
Optionally, change how the format is applied for fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report that are scoped by corresponding field.
By default, the conditionally format is based on all visible values. However when you scope by corresponding field, instead of using all visible values, you can apply the conditional format for each combination of:
-
A column and its parent row field, by selecting each Column group.
-
A row and its parent column field, by selecting each Row group.
-
-
Click Format to display the Format Cells dialog box.
-
Select the number, font, border, or fill format you want to apply when the cell value meets the condition, and then click OK.
You can choose more than one format. The formats you select are displayed in the Preview box.
Note: You can’t conditionally format fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report by unique or duplicate values.
In the example shown here, conditional formatting is used on the Instructor column to find instructors that are teaching more than one class (duplicate instructor names are highlighted in a pale red color). Grade values that are found just once in the Grade column (unique values) are highlighted in a green color.
Quick formatting
-
Select the cells that you want to conditionally format.
-
On the Home tab, in the Style group, click the arrow next to Conditional Formatting, and then click Highlight Cells Rules.
-
Select Duplicate Values.
-
Enter the values you want to use, and then select a format.
Advanced formatting
-
Select the cells that you want to conditionally format.
-
On the Home tab, in the Styles group, click the arrow next to Conditional Formatting, and then click Manage Rules. The Conditional Formatting Rules Manager dialog box appears.
-
Do one of the following:
-
To add a conditional format, click New Rule. The New Formatting Rule dialog box appears.
-
To add a new conditional format based on one that is already listed, select the rule, then click Duplicate Rule. The duplicate rule is copied and appears in the dialog box. Select the duplicate, then select Edit Rule. The Edit Formatting Rule dialog box appears.
-
To change a conditional format, do the following:
-
-
Make sure that the appropriate worksheet or table is selected in the Show formatting rules for list box.
-
Optionally, change the range of cells by clicking Collapse Dialog in the Applies to box to temporarily hide the dialog box, by selecting the new range of cells on the worksheet, and then by selecting Expand Dialog.
-
Select the rule, and then click Edit rule. The Edit Formatting Rule dialog box appears.
-
-
-
Under Select a Rule Type, click Format only unique or duplicate values.
-
Under Edit the Rule Description, in the Format all list box, select unique or duplicate.
-
Click Format to display the Format Cells dialog box.
-
Select the number, font, border, or fill format you want to apply when the cell value meets the condition, and then click OK.
You can choose more than one format. The formats you select are shown in the Preview box.
If none of the above options is what you’re looking for, you can create your own conditional formatting rule in a few simple steps.
Notes: If there’s already a rule defined that you just want to work a bit differently, duplicate the rule and edit it.
-
Select Home > Conditional Formatting > Manage Rules, then in the Conditional Formatting Rule Manager dialog, select a listed rule and then select Duplicate Rule. The duplicate rule then appears in the list.
-
Select the duplicate rule, then select Edit Rule.
-
Select the cells that you want to format.
-
On the Home tab, click Conditional Formatting > New Rule.
-
Create your rule and specify its format options, then click OK.
If you don’t see the options that you want, you can use a formula to determine which cells to format — see the next section for steps).
If you don’t see the exact options you need when you create your own conditional formatting rule, you can use a logical formula to specify the formatting criteria. For example, you may want to compare values in a selection to a result returned by a function or evaluate data in cells outside the selected range, which can be in another worksheet in the same workbook. Your formula must return True or False (1 or 0), but you can use conditional logic to string together a set of corresponding conditional formats, such as different colors for each of a small set of text values (for example, product category names).
Note: You can enter cell references in a formula by selecting cells directly on a worksheet or other worksheets. Selecting cells on the worksheet inserts absolute cell references. If you want Excel to adjust the references for each cell in the selected range, use relative cell references. For more information, see Create or change a cell reference and Switch between relative, absolute, and mixed references.
Tip: If any cells contain a formula that returns an error, conditional formatting is not applied to those cells. To address this, use IS functions or an IFERROR function in your formula to return a value that you specify (such as 0, or «N/A») instead of an error value.
-
On the Home tab, in the Styles group, click the arrow next to Conditional Formatting, and then click Manage Rules.
The Conditional Formatting Rules Manager dialog box appears.
-
Do one of the following:
-
To add a conditional format, click New Rule. The New Formatting Rule dialog box appears.
-
To add a new conditional format based on one that is already listed, select the rule, then click Duplicate Rule. The duplicate rule is copied and appears in the dialog box. Select the duplicate, then select Edit Rule. The Edit Formatting Rule dialog box appears.
-
To change a conditional format, do the following:
-
-
Make sure that the appropriate worksheet, table, or PivotTable report is selected in the Show formatting rules for list box.
-
Optionally, change the range of cells by clicking Collapse Dialog in the Applies to box to temporarily hide the dialog box, by selecting the new range of cells on the worksheet or other worksheets, and then by clicking Expand Dialog.
-
Select the rule, and then click Edit rule. The Edit Formatting Rule dialog box appears.
-
-
-
Under Apply Rule To, to optionally change the scope for fields in the Values area of a PivotTable report, do the following:
-
To scope by selection: Click Selected cells.
-
To scope by corresponding field: Click All cells showing <Values field> values.
-
To scope by Value field: Click All cells showing <Values field> for <Row>.
-
-
Under Select a Rule Type, click Use a formula to determine which cells to format.
-
Under Edit the Rule Description, in the Format values where this formula is true list box, enter a formula.
You have to start the formula with an equal sign (=), and the formula must return a logical value of TRUE (1) or FALSE (0).
-
Click Format to display the Format Cells dialog box.
-
Select the number, font, border, or fill format you want to apply when the cell value meets the condition, and then click OK.
You can choose more than one format. The formats you select are shown in the Preview box.
Example 1: Use two conditional formats with criteria that uses AND and OR tests
The following example shows the use of two conditional formatting rules. If the first rule doesn’t apply, the second rule applies.
First rule: a home buyer has budgeted up to $75,000 as a down payment and $1,500 per month as a mortgage payment. If both the down payment and the monthly payments fit these requirements, cells B4 and B5 are formatted green.
Second rule: if either the down payment or the monthly payment doesn’t meet the buyer’s budget, B4 and B5 are formatted red. Change some values, such as the APR, the loan term, the down payment, and the purchase amount to see what happens with the conditionally formatted cells.
Formula for first rule (applies green color)
=AND(IF($B$4<=75000,1),IF(ABS($B$5)<=1500,1))
Formula for second rule (applies red color)
=OR(IF($B$4>=75000,1),IF(ABS($B$5)>=1500,1))
Example 2: Shade every other row by using the MOD and ROW functions
A conditional format applied to every cell in this worksheet shades every other row in the range of cells with a blue cell color. You can select all cells in a worksheet by clicking the square above row 1 and to the left of column A. The MOD function returns a remainder after a number (the first argument) is divided by divisor (the second argument). The ROW function returns the current row number. When you divide the current row number by 2, you always get either a 0 remainder for an even number or a 1 remainder for an odd number. Because 0 is FALSE and 1 is TRUE, every odd numbered row is formatted. The rule uses this formula: =MOD(ROW(),2)=1.
Note: You can enter cell references in a formula by selecting cells directly on a worksheet or other worksheets. Selecting cells on the worksheet inserts absolute cell references. If you want Excel to adjust the references for each cell in the selected range, use relative cell references. For more information, see Create or change a cell reference and Switch between relative, absolute, and mixed references.
-
The following video shows you the basics of using formulas with conditional formatting.
If you want to apply an existing formatting style to new or other data on your worksheet, you can use Format Painter to copy the conditional formatting to that data.
-
Click the cell that has the conditional formatting that you want to copy.
-
Click Home > Format Painter.
The pointer changes to a paintbrush.
Tip: You can double-click Format Painter if you want to keep using the paintbrush to paste the conditional formatting in other cells.
-
To paste the conditional formatting, drag the paintbrush across the cells or ranges of cells you want to format.
-
To stop using the paintbrush, press Esc.
Note: If you’ve used a formula in the rule that applies the conditional formatting, you might have to adjust any cell references in the formula after pasting the conditional format. For more information, see Switch between relative, absolute, and mixed references.
If your worksheet contains conditional formatting, you can quickly locate the cells so that you can copy, change, or delete the conditional formats. Use the Go To Special command to find only cells with a specific conditional format, or to find all cells that have conditional formats.
Find all cells that have a conditional format
-
Click any cell that does not have a conditional format.
-
On the Home tab, in the Editing group, click the arrow next to Find & Select, and then click Conditional Formatting.
Find only cells that have the same conditional format
-
Click any cell that has the conditional format that you want to find.
-
On the Home tab, in the Editing group, click the arrow next to Find & Select, and then click Go To Special.
-
Click Conditional formats.
-
Click Same under Data validation.
When you use conditional formatting, you set up rules that Excel uses to determine when to apply the conditional formatting. To manage these rules, you should understand the order in which these rules are evaluated, what happens when two or more rules conflict, how copying and pasting can affect rule evaluation, how to change the order in which rules are evaluated, and when to stop rule evaluation.
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Learn about conditional formatting rule precedence
You create, edit, delete, and view all conditional formatting rules in the workbook by using the Conditional Formatting Rules Manager dialog box. (On the Home tab, click Conditional Formatting, and then click Manage Rules.)
The Conditional Formatting Rules Manager dialog box appears.
When two or more conditional formatting rules apply, these rules are evaluated in order of precedence (top to bottom) by how they are listed in this dialog box.
Here’s an example that has expiration dates for ID badges. We want to mark badges that expire within 60 days but are not yet expired with a yellow background color, and expired badges with a red background color.
In this example, cells with employee ID numbers who have certification dates due to expire within 60 days are formatted in yellow, and ID numbers of employees with an expired certification are formatted in red. The rules are shown in the following image.
The first rule (which, if True, sets cell background color to red) tests a date value in column B against the current date (obtained by using the TODAY function in a formula). Assign the formula to the first data value in column B, which is B2. The formula for this rule is =B2<TODAY(). This formula tests the cells in column B (cells B2:B15). If the formula for any cell in column B evaluates to True, its corresponding cell in column A (for example, A5 corresponds to B5, A11 corresponds to B11), is then formatted with a red background color. After all the cells specified under Applies to are evaluated with this first rule, the second rule is tested. This formula checks if values in the B column are less than 60 days from the current date (for example, suppose today’s date is 8/11/2010). The cell in B4, 10/4/2010, is less than 60 days from today, so it evaluates as True, and is formatted with a yellow background color. The formula for this rule is =B2<TODAY()+60. Any cell that was first formatted red by the highest rule in the list is left alone.
A rule higher in the list has greater precedence than a rule lower in the list. By default, new rules are always added to the top of the list and therefore have a higher precedence, so you’ll want to keep an eye on their order. You can change the order of precedence by using the Move Up and Move Down arrows in the dialog box.
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What happens when more than one conditional formatting rule evaluates to True
Sometimes you have more than one conditional formatting rule that evaluates to True. Here’s how rules are applied, first when rules don’t conflict, and then when they do conflict:
When rules don’t conflict For example, if one rule formats a cell with a bold font and another rule formats the same cell with a red color, the cell is formatted with both a bold font and a red color. Because there is no conflict between the two formats, both rules are applied.
When rules conflict For example, one rule sets a cell font color to red and another rule sets a cell font color to green. Because the two rules are in conflict, only one can apply. The rule that is applied is the one that is higher in precedence (higher in the list in the dialog box).
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How pasting, filling, and the Format Painter affect conditional formatting rules
While editing your worksheet, you may copy and paste cell values that have conditional formats, fill a range of cells with conditional formats, or use the Format Painter. These operations can affect conditional formatting rule precedence in the following way: a new conditional formatting rule based on the source cells is created for the destination cells.
If you copy and paste cell values that have conditional formats to a worksheet opened in another instance of Excel (another Excel.exe process running at the same time on the computer), no conditional formatting rule is created in the other instance and the format is not copied to that instance.
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What happens when a conditional format and a manual format conflict
If a conditional formatting rule evaluates as True, it takes precedence over any existing manual format for the same selection. This means that if they conflict, the conditional formatting applies and the manual format does not. If you delete the conditional formatting rule, the manual formatting for the range of cells remains.
Manual formatting is not listed in the Conditional Formatting Rules Manager dialog box nor is it used to determine precedence.
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Controlling when rule evaluation stops by using the Stop If True check box
For backwards compatibility with versions of Excel earlier than Excel 2007, you can select the Stop If True check box in the Manage Rules dialog box to simulate how conditional formatting might appear in those earlier versions of Excel that do not support more than three conditional formatting rules or multiple rules applied to the same range.
For example, if you have more than three conditional formatting rules for a range of cells, and are working with a version of Excel earlier than Excel 2007, that version of Excel:
-
Evaluates only the first three rules.
-
Applies the first rule in precedence that is True.
-
Ignores rules lower in precedence if they are True.
The following table summarizes each possible condition for the first three rules:
If rule
Is
And if rule
Is
And if rule
Is
Then
One
True
Two
True or False
Three
True or False
Rule one is applied and rules two and three are ignored.
One
False
Two
True
Three
True or False
Rule two is applied and rule three is ignored.
One
False
Two
False
Three
True
Rule three is applied.
One
False
Two
False
Three
False
No rules are applied.
You can select or clear the Stop If True check box to change the default behavior:
-
To evaluate only the first rule, select the Stop If True check box for the first rule.
-
To evaluate only the first and second rules, select the Stop If True check box for the second rule.
You can’t select or clear the Stop If True check box if the rule formats by using a data bar, color scale, or icon set.
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If you’d like to watch a video showing how to manage conditional formatting rules, see Video: Manage conditional formatting.
The order in which conditional formatting rules are evaluated — their precedence — also reflects their relative importance: the higher a rule is on the list of conditional formatting rules, the more important it is. This means that in cases where two conditional formatting rules conflict with each other, the rule that is higher on the list is applied and the rule that is lower on the list is not applied.
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On the Home tab, in the Styles group, click the arrow next to Conditional Formatting, and then click Manage Rules.
The Conditional Formatting Rules Manager dialog box appears.
The conditional formatting rules for the current selection are displayed, including the rule type, the format, the range of cells the rule applies to, and the Stop If True setting.
If you don’t see the rule that you want, in the Show formatting rules for list box, make sure that the right range of cells, worksheet, table, or PivotTable report is selected.
-
Select a rule. Only one rule can be selected at a time.
-
To move the selected rule up in precedence, click Move Up. To move the selected rule down in precedence, click Move Down.
-
Optionally, to stop rule evaluation at a specific rule, select the Stop If True check box.
Clear conditional formatting on a worksheet
-
On the Home tab, click Conditional Formatting > Clear Rules > Clear Rules from Entire Sheet.
Follow these steps if you have conditional formatting in a worksheet, and you need to remove it.
For an entire
worksheet
-
On the Home tab, click Conditional Formatting > Clear Rules > Clear Rules from Entire Sheet.
In a range of cells
-
Select the cells that contain the conditional formatting.
-
Click the Quick Analysis Lens button that appears to the bottom right of the selected data.
Notes:
Quick Analysis Lens will not be visible if:-
All of the cells in the selected range are empty, or
-
There is an entry only in the upper-left cell of the selected range, with all of the other cells in the range being empty.
-
-
Click Clear Format.
Find and remove the same conditional formats throughout a worksheet
-
Click on a cell that has the conditional format that you want to remove throughout the worksheet.
-
On the Home tab, click the arrow next to Find & Select, and then click Go To Special.
-
Click Conditional formats.
-
Click Same under Data validation. to select all of the cells that contain the same conditional formatting rules.
-
On the Home tab, click Conditional Formatting > Clear Rules > Clear Rules from Selected Cells.
Tip: The following sections use examples so you can follow along in Excel for the web. To start, download the Conditional Formatting Examples workbook and save it to OneDrive. Then, open OneDrive in a web browser and select the downloaded file.
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Select the cells you want to format, then select Home > Styles > Conditional Formatting > New Rule. You can also open the Conditional Formatting pane and create a new rule without first selecting a range of cells.
-
Verify or adjust the cells in Apply to range.
-
Choose a Rule Type and adjust the options to meet your needs.
-
When finished, select Done and the rule will be applied to your range.
-
Select a cell which has a conditional format you want to change. Or you can select Home > Styles > Conditional Formatting > Manage Rules to open the Conditional Formatting task pane and select an existing rule.
-
The Conditional Formatting task pane displays any rules which apply to specific cells or ranges of cells.
-
Hover over the rule and select Edit by clicking the pencil icon. This opens the task pane for rule editing.
-
Modify the rule settings and click Done to apply the changes.
The Conditional Formatting task pane provides everything you need for creating, editing, and deleting rules. Use Manage Rules to open the task pane and work with all the Conditional Formatting rules in a selection or a sheet.
-
In an open workbook, select Home > Styles > Conditional Formatting > Manage Rules.
-
The Conditional Formatting task pane opens and displays the rules, scoped to your current selection.
From here, you can:
-
Choose a different scope on the Manage Rules in menu — for example, choosing this sheet tells Excel to look for all rules on the current sheet.
-
Add a rule by selecting New Rule (the plus sign).
-
Delete all rules in scope by selecting Delete All Rules (the garbage can).
You can use a formula to determine how Excel evaluates and formats a cell. Open the Conditional Formatting pane and select an existing rule or create a new rule.
In the Rule Type dropdown, select Formula.
Enter the formula in the box. You can use any formula that returns a logical value of TRUE (1) or FALSE (0), but you can use AND and OR to combine a set of logical checks.
For example, =AND(B3=»Grain»,D3<500) is true for a cell in row 3 if both B3=»Grain» and D3<500 are true.
You can clear conditional formatting in selected cells or the entire worksheet.
-
To clear conditional formatting in selected cells, select the cells in the worksheet. Then Select Home > Styles > Conditional Formatting > Clear Rules > Clear Rules from Selected Cells.
-
To clear conditional formatting in the entire worksheet, select Home > Styles > Conditional Formatting > Clear Rules > Clear Rules from Entire Sheet.
-
To delete conditional formatting rules, select Home > Styles > Conditional Formatting >Manage Rules and use the delete (garbage can) on a specific rule or the Delete all rules button.
Color scales are visual guides which help you understand data distribution and variation. Excel offers both two-color scales and three-color scales.
A two-color scale helps you compare a range of cells by using a gradation of two colors. The shade of the color represents higher or lower values. For example, in a green and yellow color scale, you can specify that higher value cells be more green and lower value cells have a more yellow.
A three-color scale helps you compare a range of cells by using a gradation of three colors. The shade of the color represents higher, middle, or lower values. For example, in a green, yellow, and red color scale, you can specify that higher value cells have a green color, middle value cells have a yellow color, and lower value cells have a red color.
Tip: You can sort cells that have one of these formats by their color — just use the context menu.
-
Select the cells that you want to conditionally format using color scales.
-
Click Home > Styles > Conditional Formatting > Color Scales and select a color scale.
A data bar helps you see the value of a cell relative to other cells. The length of the data bar represents the value in the cell. A longer bar represents a higher value, and a shorter bar represents a lower value. Data bars are useful in spotting higher and lower numbers, especially with large amounts of data, such as top selling and bottom selling toys in a holiday sales report.
-
Select the cells that you want to conditionally format.
-
Select Home > Styles > Conditional Formatting > Data Bars and select a style.
Use an icon set to annotate and classify data into three to five categories separated by a threshold value. Each icon represents a range of values. For example, in the 3 Arrows icon set, the green up arrow represents higher values, the yellow sideways arrow represents middle values, and the red down arrow represents lower values.
-
Select the cells that you want to conditionally format.
-
Select Home > Styles > Conditional Formatting > Icon Sets and choose an icon set.
This option lets you highlight specific cell values within a range of cells based on their specific contents. This can be especially useful when working with data sorted using a different range.
For example, in an inventory worksheet sorted by categories, you could highlight the names of products where you have fewer than 10 items in stock so it’s easy to see which products need restocking without resorting the data.
-
Select the cells that you want to conditionally format.
-
Select Home > Styles > Conditional Formatting > Highlight Cell Rules.
-
Select the comparison, such as Between, Equal To, Text That Contains, or A Date Occurring.
You can highlight the highest and lowest values in a range of cells which are based on a specified cutoff value.
Some examples of this would include highlighting the top five selling products in a regional report, the bottom 15% products in a customer survey, or the top 25 salaries in a department.
-
Select the cells that you want to conditionally format.
-
Select Home > Styles > Conditional Formatting > Top/Bottom Rules.
-
Select the command you want, such as Top 10 items or Bottom 10 %.
-
Enter the values you want to use, and select a format (fill, text, or border color).
You can highlight values above or below an average or standard deviation in a range of cells.
For example, you can find the above-average performers in an annual performance review, or locate manufactured materials that fall below two standard deviations in a quality rating.
-
Select the cells that you want to conditionally format.
-
Select Home> Styles > Conditional Formatting > Top/Bottom Rules.
-
Select the option you want, such as Above Average or Below Average.
-
Enter the values you want to use, and select a format (fill, text, or border color).
-
Select the cells that you want to conditionally format.
-
Select Home > Styles > Conditional Formatting > Highlight Cell Rules > Duplicate Values.
-
Enter the values you want to use, and select a format (fill, text, or border color).
If you want to apply an existing formatting style to other cells on your worksheet, use Format Painter to copy the conditional formatting to that data.
-
Click the cell that has the conditional formatting you want to copy.
-
Click Home > Format Painter.
The pointer will change to a paintbrush.
Tip: You can double-click Format Painter if you want to keep using the paintbrush to paste the conditional formatting in other cells.
-
Drag the paintbrush across the cells or range of cells you want formatted.
-
To stop using the paintbrush, press Esc.
Note: If you’ve used a formula in the rule that applies the conditional formatting, you might have to adjust relative and absolute references in the formula after pasting the conditional format. For more information, see Switch between relative, absolute, and mixed references.
Note: You can’t use conditional formatting on external references to another workbook.
Need more help?
You can always ask an expert in the Excel Tech Community or get support in the Answers community.
See Also
Conditional formatting compatibility issues
Let’s say that one of our tasks is to entering of the information about: did the ordering to a customer in the current month. Then on the basis of the information you need to select the cell in color according to the condition: which from customers have not made any orders for the past 3 months. For these customers you will need to re-send the offer.
Of course it’s the task for Excel. The program should automatically find such counterparties and, accordingly, to color ones. For these conditions we will use to the conditional formatting.
The filling cells with dates automatically
At first, you need to prepare to the structure for filling the register. First of all, let’s consider to the ready example of the automated register, which is depicted in the picture below. Today date 07.07.2018:
The user to need only to specify, if the customer have made an order in the current month, in the corresponding cell you should enter the text value of «order». The main condition for the allocation: if for 3 months the contractor did not make any order, his number is automatically highlighted in red.
Presented this decision should automate some work processes and to simplify to the visual data analysis.
The automatic filling of the cells with the relevant dates
At first, for the register with numbers of customers we will create to the column headers with green and up to date for months that will automatically display to the periods of time. To do this, in the cell B1 you need to enter the following formula:
How does the formula work for automatically generating of the outgoing months?
In the picture, the formula returns the period of time passing since the date of writing this article: 17.09.2017. In the first argument in the function DATE is the nested formula that always returns the current year to today’s date thanks to the functions: YEAR and TODAY. In the second argument is the month number (-1). The negative number means that we are interested in what it was a month last time. The example of the conditions for the second argument with the value:
- 1 means the first month (January) in the year that is specified in the first argument;
- 0 – it is 1 month ago;
- -1 – there is 2 months ago from the beginning of the current year (i.e. 01.10.2016).
The last argument-is the day number of the month, which is specified in the second argument. As a result, the DATE function collects all parameters into a single value and the formula returns to the corresponding date.
Next, go to the cell C1 and type the following formula:
As you can see now the DATE function uses the value from the cell B1 and increases to the month number by 1 in relation to the previous cell. As the result is the 1 – the number of the following month.
Now you need to copy this formula from the cell C1 in the rest of the column headings in the range D1:AY1.
To highlight to the cell range B1:AY1 and select to the tool: «HOME»-«Cells»-«Format Cells» or just to press CTRL+1. In the dialog box that appears, in the tab «Number» in the section «Category» you need to select the option «Custom». In the «Type:» to enter the value: MMM. YY (required the letters in upper register). Because of this, we will get to the cropped display of the date values in the headers of the register, what simplifies to the visual analysis and make it more comfortable due to better readability.
Please note! At the onset of the month of January (D1), the formula automatically changes in the date to the year in the next one.
How to select the column by color in Excel under the terms
Now you need to highlight to the cell by color which respect of the current month. Because of this, we can easily find the column in which you need to enter the actual data for this month. To do this:
- To select the range of the cells B2:AY15 and select the tool: «HOME» -«Styles» -«Conditional Formatting»-«New Rule». And in the appeared window «New Formatting Rule» you need to select the option: «Use a formula to determine which cells to format»
- In the input field to enter the formula:
- Click «Format» and indicate on the tab «Fill» in what color (for example green) will be the selected cells of the current month. Then on all Windows for confirmation to click «OK».
The column under the appropriate heading of the register is automatically highlighted in green accordingly to our terms and conditions:
How does the formula highlight of the column color on a condition work?
Due to the fact that before the creation of the conditional formatting rule we have covered all the table data for inputting data of register, the formatting will be active for each cell in the range B2:AY15. The mixed reference in the formula B$1 (absolute address only for rows, but for columns it is relative) determines that the formula will always to refer to the first row of each column.
Automatic highlighting of the column in the condition of the current month
The main condition for the fill by color of the cells: if the range B1:AY1 is the same date that the first day of the current month, then the cells in a column change its colors by specified in conditional formatting.
Please note! In this formula, for the last argument of the function DATE is shown 1, in the same way as for formulas in determining the dates for the column headings of the register.
In our case, is the green filling of the cells. If we open our register in next month, that it has the corresponding column is highlighted in green regardless of the current day.
The table is formatted, now we are filling it with the text value of the «order» in a mixed order of clients for current and past months.
How to highlight the cells in red color according to the condition
Now we need to highlight in red to the cells with the numbers of clients who for 3 months have not made any order. To do this:
- Select the range of the cells A2:A15 (that is, the list of the customer numbers) and select to the tool: «HOME»-«Styles»-«Conditional formatting»-«Create rule». And in the window that appeared «Create a formatting rule» to select the option: «Use the formula for determining which cells to format».
- This time in the input box to enter the formula:
- To click «Format» and specify the red color on the tab «Fill». Then on all Windows click «OK».
- Fill the cells with the text value of «order» as in the picture and look at the result:
The numbers of customers are highlighted in red, if in the row has no have the value «order» in the last three cells for the current month (inclusively).
The analysis of the formula for the highlighting of cells according to the condition
Firstly, we will do by the middle part of our formula. The SHIFT function returns a range reference shifted relative to the basic range of the certain number of rows and columns. The returned reference can be a single cell or a range of cells. Optionally, you can define to the number of returned rows and columns. In our example, the function returns the reference to the cell range for the last 3 months.
The important part for our terms of highlighting in color – is belong to the first argument of the SHIFT function. It determines from which month to start the offset. In this example, there is the cell D2, that is, the beginning of the year – January. Of course for the rest of the cells in the column the row number for the base of the cell will correspond to the line number in what it is located. The following 2 arguments of the SHIFT function to determine how many rows and columns should be done offset. Since the calculations for each customer will carry in the same line, the offset value for the rows we specified is -0.
At the same time for the calculating the value of the third argument (the offset by the columns) we use to the nested formula MONTH(TODAY()), which in accordance with the terms returns to the number of the current month in the current year. From the calculated formula of the month as a number subtract the number 4, that is, in cases November we get the offset by 8 columns. And, for example, for June – there are on 2 columns only.
The last two arguments for the SHIFT function, determine the height (in the number of rows) and width (in the number of columns) of the returned range. In our example, there is the area of the cell with height on 1 row and with width on 4 columns. This range covers to the columns of 3 previous months and the current month.
The first function in the COUNTIF formula checks the condition: how many times in the returned range using the SHIFT function, we can found to the text value «order». If the function returns the value of 0, it means from the client with this number for 3 months there was not any order. And in accordance with our terms and conditions, the cell with number of this client is shown in red fill color.
If we want to register to data for customers, Excel is ideally suited for this purpose. You can easily record in the appropriate categories to the number of ordered goods, as well as the date of implementation of transaction. The problem gradually starts with arising of the data growth.
Download example automatic highlight cells by color.
If so many of them that we need to spend a few minutes looking for a specific position of the register and analysis of the information entered. In this case, it is necessary to add in the table to the register of mechanisms to automate some workflows of the user. And so we did.
In this article we will learn how to color rows based on text criteria we use the “Conditional Formatting” option. This option is available in the “Home Tab” in the “Styles” group in Microsoft Excel.
Conditional Formatting in Excel is used to highlight the data on the basis of some criteria. It would be difficult to see various trends just for examining your Excel worksheet. Conditional Formatting in excel provides a way to visualize data and make worksheets easier to understand.
Excel Conditional Formatting allows you to apply formatting basis on the cell values such as colors, icons and data bars. For this, we will create a rule in excel Conditional Formatting based on cell value
How to write an if statement in excel?
IF function is used for logic_test and returns value on the basis of the result of the logic_test. Excel conditional formatting formula multiple conditions uses Statements like less than or equal to or greater than or equal to the value are used in IF formula
Syntax:
=IF (logical_test, [value_if_true], [value_if_false])
Let’s learn how to do conditional formatting in excel using IF function with the example.
Here is a list of Names and their respective Scores.
multiple if statements excel functions are used here. So, there are 3 results based on the condition. if then statements in excel is used via excel conditional formatting formula
Write the formula in C2 cell.
Formula
=IF(B2<50,»C»,IF(B2<75,»B»,»A»))
Explanation:
IF function only returns 2 results, one [value_if_True] and Second [value-if_False]
First IF function checks, if the score is less than 50, would get C grade, The Second IF function tests if the score is less than 75 would get B grade and the rest A grade.
Copy the formula in other cells, select the cells taking the first cell where the formula is already applied, use shortcut key Ctrl + D
Now we will apply conditional formatting to it.
Select Home >Conditional Formatting > New Rule.
A dialog box appears
Select Format only cells that contain > Specific text in option list and write C as text to be formatted.
Fill Format with Red colour and click OK.
Now select the colour Yellow and Green for A and B respectively as done above for C.
In this article, we used IF function and Conditional formatting tool to get highlighted grade.
As you can see excel change cell color based on value of another cell using IF function and Conditional formatting tool
Hope you learned how to use conditional formatting in Excel using IF function. Explore more conditional formulas in excel here. You can perform Conditional Formatting in Excel 2016, 2013 and 2010. If you have any unresolved query regarding this article, please do mention below. We will help you.
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Every tip online about conditional formatting and a list is about highlighting cells that match on the list. How can I highlight cells that don’t match (ignoring blank cells).
For example, a list of times at 15 minute intervals, hh:mm AM/PM format:
5:00 AM
5:15 AM
5:30 AM
5:45 AM
6:00 AM
And so on…
And a column of entries, conditionally formatted:
5:30 AM
6:15 AM
7AM
830 AM
The first two entries are fine. How to conditionally format to highlight the last two entries (to warn the user to retype) as not being on the list? (For example, check for absence of colon («:»)?)
Thank you.
asked Feb 9, 2022 at 1:47
If its only about validating for the correct time format, you can also use Data > Data Tools > Data Validation. Set to allow «Time» only. You may then also set an input and error message to help guide the user (other tabs in the the Data validation dialogue box).
Failing that, and to answer your original question. Simply define your custom new rule using a formula (assuming you are entering the data in A1) and the approved list is named list:
=ISNA(MATCH(A1,list,0))
Match will return #N/A when it is unable to find the item in the list. ISNA() turns this into TRUE, causing the highlight to occur.
answered Feb 9, 2022 at 2:45
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There are several ways to color format cells in Excel, but not all of them accomplish the same thing. If you want to fill a cell with color based on a condition, you will need to use the Conditional Formatting feature.
Fill a cell with color based on a condition
Before learning to conditionally format cells with color, here is how you can add color to any cell in Excel.
Cell static format for colors
You can change the color of cells by going into the formatting of the cell and then go into the Fill section and then select the intended color to fill the cell.
In the above example, the color of cell E3 has been changed from No Fill to Blue color, and notice that the value in cell E3 is 6 and if we change the value in this cell from 6 to any other value the cell color will not change and it will always remain blue. What does this mean?
This means that cell color is independent of cell value, so no matter what value will be in E3 the cell color will always be blue. We can refer to this as static formatting of the cell E3.
Conditional formatting cell color based on cell value
Now, what if we want to change the cell color based on cell value? Suppose we want the color of cell E3 to change with the change of the value in it. Say, we want to color code the cell E3 as follows:
- 0-10 : We want the cell color to be Blue
- 11-20 : We want the cell color to be Red
- 21-30 : We want the cell color to be Yellow
- Any other value or Blank : No color or No Fill.
We can achieve this with the help of Conditional Formatting. On the Home tab, in the Style subgroup, click on Conditional Formatting→New Rule.
Note: Make sure the cell on which you want to apply conditional formatting is selected
Then select “Format only cells that contain,” then in the first drop down select “Cell Value” and in the second drop-down select “between” :
Then, on the first box, enter 0 and in the second box, enter 10, then click on the Format button and go to Fill Tab, select the blue color, click Ok and again click Ok. Now enter a value between 0 and 10 in cell E3 and you will see that cell color changes to blue and if there is any other value or no value then cell color revert to transparent.
Repeat the same process for 11-20 and 21-30 and you’ll see that number changes as per the value of the cell.
Conditional formatting with text
Similarly, we can do the same process for text values as well instead of numerical values by using the “Specific Text” in the first drop down and in the second drop-down select either of 4 values containing, not containing, beginning with, ending with and then enter the specific text in the text box.
For Example:
First, select the cell on which you want to apply conditional format, here we need to select cell B1. On the home tab, in the Styles subgroup, click on Conditional Formatting→New Rule.
Now select Format only cells that contain the option, then in the first drop down select “Specific Text” and in the second drop-down select either of the 4 options: containing, not containing, beginning with, ending with. In the example below, we use beginning with “J” and then select Format button to select Blue as the fill color.
Conditional format based on another cell value
In the example above, we are changing the cell color based on that cell value only, we can also change the cell color based on other cells value as well. Suppose we want to change the color of cell E3 based on the value in D3, to do that we have to use a formula in conditional formatting.
Now suppose if we want to change cell E3 color to blue if the D3 value is greater than 3 and to green if the D3 value is greater than 5 and to red, if D3’s value is greater than 10, we can do that with the conditional format using a formula.
Again follow the same procedure.
First, select the cell on which you want to apply conditional format, here we need to select cell E3. On the home tab, in the Styles subgroup, click on Conditional Formatting→New Rule.
Now select Use a formula to determine which cells to format option, and in the box type the formula: D3>5; then select Format button to select green as the fill color.
Keep in mind that we are changing the format of cell E3 based on cell D3 value, note that the cursor now is pointing at E3, which is the cell we use to set conditional format. The formula “=D3>5” means if D3 is greater than 5 then the value of E3 will change to green. Click ok and see the color of cell E3 changes to green as D3 right now contains 6.
Now let’s apply the conditional formatting to E3 if D3 is greater than 3. This means if D3>3 then cell color should become “Blue” and if D3>5 then cell color should remain green as we did it in the previous step.
Now, if you follow the above steps as we did for Green color, you will see that even if the cell value is 6, it is showing blue color and not green, because it takes the latest conditional formatting we set for that cell, and as 6 is also greater than 3 hence it is showing blue color but it should show green color.
So, we have to arrange the rules we have applied for any particular cells, we can do that by going into Manage Rules option of conditional formatting.
You can see all the rules applied to that cell and then we can arrange the rules or set their priority by using the arrow buttons. A number greater than 5 will also be greater than 3, hence greater than 5 rule will take higher priority and we can move it upward using the arrow buttons.
Now when you enter 6 in D3, the cell color of E3 will become green and when you enter 4, the cell color will become blue.
If you are tired of reading too many articles without finding your answer or need a real Expert to help you save hours of struggle, click on this link to enter your problem and get connected to a qualified Excel expert in a few seconds. You can share your file and an expert will create a solution for you on the spot during a 1:1 live chat session. Each session last less than 1 hour and the first session is free.
Are you still looking for help with Conditional Formatting? View our comprehensive round-up of Conditional Formatting tutorials here.
Please Note:
This article is written for users of the following Microsoft Excel versions: 2007 and 2010. If you are using an earlier version (Excel 2003 or earlier), this tip may not work for you. For a version of this tip written specifically for earlier versions of Excel, click here: Colors in an IF Function.
Written by Allen Wyatt (last updated June 21, 2018)
This tip applies to Excel 2007 and 2010
Steve would like to create an IF statement (using the worksheet function) based on the color of a cell. For example, if A1 has a green fill, he wants to return the word «go», if it has a red fill, he wants to return the word «stop», and if it is any other color return the word «neither». Steve prefers to not use a macro to do this.
Unfortunately, there is no way to acceptably accomplish this task without using macros, in one form or another. The closest non-macro solution is to create a name that determines colors, in this manner:
- Select cell A1.
- Click Insert | Name | Define. Excel displays the Define Name dialog box.
- Use a name such as «mycolor» (without the quote marks).
- In the Refers To box, enter the following, as a single line:
- Click OK.
=IF(GET.CELL(38,Sheet1!A1)=10,"GO",IF(GET.CELL(38,Sheet1!A1) =3,"Stop","Neither"))
With this name defined, you can, in any cell, enter the following:
=mycolor
The result is that you will see text based upon the color of the cell in which you place this formula. The drawback to this approach, of course, is that it doesn’t allow you to reference cells other than the one in which the formula is placed.
The solution, then, is to use a user-defined function, which is (by definition) a macro. The macro can check the color with which a cell is filled and then return a value. For instance, the following example returns one of the three words, based on the color in a target cell:
Function CheckColor1(range) If range.Interior.Color = RGB(256, 0, 0) Then CheckColor1 = "Stop" ElseIf range.Interior.Color = RGB(0, 256, 0) Then CheckColor1 = "Go" Else CheckColor1 = "Neither" End If End Function
This macro evaluates the RGB values of the colors in a cell, and returns a string based on those values. You could use the function in a cell in this manner:
=CheckColor1(B5)
If you prefer to check index colors instead of RGB colors, then the following variation will work:
Function CheckColor2(range) If range.Interior.ColorIndex = 3 Then CheckColor2 = "Stop" ElseIf range.Interior.ColorIndex = 4 Then CheckColor2 = "Go" Else CheckColor2 = "Neither" End If End Function
Whether you are using the RGB approach or the color index approach, you’ll want to check to make sure that the values used in the macros reflect the actual values used for the colors in the cells you are testing. In other words, Excel allows you to use different shades of green and red, so you’ll want to make sure that the RGB values and color index values used in the macros match those used by the color shades in your cells.
One way you can do this is to use a very simple macro that does nothing but return a color index value:
Function GetFillColor(Rng As Range) As Long GetFillColor = Rng.Interior.ColorIndex End Function
Now, in your worksheet, you can use the following:
=GetFillColor(B5)
The result is the color index value of cell B5 is displayed. Assuming that cell B5 is formatted using one of the colors you expect (red or green), you can plug the index value back into the earlier macros to get the desired results. You could simply skip that step, however, and rely on the value returned by GetFillColor to put together an IF formula, in this manner:
=IF(GetFillColor(B5)=4,"Go", IF(GetFillColor(B5)=3,"Stop", "Neither"))
You’ll want to keep in mind that these functions (whether you look at the RGB color values or the color index values) examine the explicit formatting of a cell. They don’t take into account any implicit formatting, such as that applied through conditional formatting.
For some other good ideas, formulas, and functions on working with colors, refer to this page at Chip Pearson’s website:
http://www.cpearson.com/excel/colors.aspx
If you would like to know how to use the macros described on this page (or on any other page on the ExcelTips sites), I’ve prepared a special page that includes helpful information. Click here to open that special page in a new browser tab.
ExcelTips is your source for cost-effective Microsoft Excel training.
This tip (10780) applies to Microsoft Excel 2007 and 2010. You can find a version of this tip for the older menu interface of Excel here: Colors in an IF Function.
Author Bio
With more than 50 non-fiction books and numerous magazine articles to his credit, Allen Wyatt is an internationally recognized author. He is president of Sharon Parq Associates, a computer and publishing services company. Learn more about Allen…
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Have you ever stared at a spreadsheet looking for the important stuff? The problem with many spreadsheets is that all the cells look the same. So you have to hunt for key or actionable information. In this tutorial, I’ll show how to highlight cells in Excel using built-in conditional formatting criteria. (Includes practice file.)
I routinely see this scenario. You get a spreadsheet from someone with hundreds of data rows that look the same. Everything is formatted in the same boring way. But is the data the same? Are there cell values that are different from the rest? Is something outside the average? These are typical questions users have when they open spreadsheets.
What is Conditional Formatting in Excel?
Instead of having the reader scan each cell, you can have Microsoft Excel do some legwork using some rules. This allows Excel to apply a defined format to a range of cells that meet specific criteria or conditions. These defined rules evaluate a cell value to see if it meets a specific criteria. If the condition is met, certain formatting is applied to the cell.
The goal is to make important information stand out so you can find it easier.
Excel already does some of this for you. For example, when you format numbers, there are options to display negative numbers in red. This is an example of a predefined format.
The program even allows you to use formatting options on individual cells or rows. The simplest method is to have Excel apply conditional formatting if it meets certain conditions or locations. This uses the “Cell Value Is” method.
Cell Value Highlight Examples
Below is a small sampling of ideas for using conditional formatting:
- Apply a red background fill if the cell value is less than 50
- Apply an italic, bold font style if the cell value is between 70 and 90
- Apply a green font color if the cell text contains “Montana.”
- Highlight cells that are equal to 15 with a red border
- Apply a yellow background fill to duplicate values
- Add an Up arrow icon to cell values above 10%
- Highlight all blank cells
Excel also allows you to use formulas for conditional formatting. One benefit to Excel formulas is that you can reference the values elsewhere in your spreadsheet. In the example below, I’m using an Excel IF formula to test if the cell value in B2 is greater than the value in C2. If the formula is TRUE, apply a green background color.
Microsoft has greatly enhanced this feature over the years and now predefines popular examples, so you don’t need to rely on formulas as much. Below are some popular examples.
Adding a new format rule is easy. The hardest part is finding what you want to highlight on your spreadsheet. It helps to think about your audiences’ needs and what actions they might take.
How to Highlight Cells Above a Specific Number
If you wish to follow along, this is Example 1 from the sample worksheet below. Again, I’m going to highlight selected cells if the state’s population exceeds or equals 2% of the US population.
- Open the state-counts-cf.xlsx sample spreadsheet and click the Example 1 tab.
- Click cell F2.
- Select the whole column by pressing Ctrl +Shift + ↓.
- From the Home tab, click the Conditional Formatting button.
- From the drop-down menu, select Highlight Cell Rules.
- From the side menu, select Greater Than…
- Adjust the value in the Format cells that are GREATER THAN: field.
Note: Excel will pre-populate this field based on the existing values of your highlighted cells.
- Enter your desired value. In our case, it’s 2.0%. Excel will start highlighting cells for you.
- Click the down triangle ▼ to make your color selection.
✪ Note: You can create a different color scheme by selecting a Custom Format.
- Click OK.
You should now see your results applied.
How to Highlight Top 10 Items
One popular request is to find the top entries, whether they be a set number or percentage. This is an example of one of Excel’s preset or built-in formats. In other words, you don’t need to enter specific values as you did in Example 1. Instead, these presets are built around common items people look for, such as Top 10 or below-average performers. The advantage is that you don’t have to do the math.
In this example, I want to highlight the top 10 states by US House Seats in Column D.
- Open the state-counts-cf.xlsx sample spreadsheet and click the Example 2 tab.
- Click cell D2.
- Select the whole column by pressing Ctrl +Shift + ↓.
- From the Home tab, click the Conditional Formatting button.
- From the Conditional Formatting drop-down menu, select Top/Bottom Rules.
- From the side menu, select Top 10 Items…
- In the Top 10 Items dialog box, adjust your count or color scheme if necessary.
- Click OK.
One advantage to using color is that Excel can sort by color too. Additionally, you can also SUM or COUNT colored cells.
How to Use Data Bars Instead of Background Color
Another useful option is to use “Data bars.” This is another type of visualization that you can apply. A key difference with the Data Bar format is that it shows all cells instead of those meeting a specific condition.
By default, Excel will keep the text value background. I find that this can be distracting. In this example, I duplicated the % Change column but told Excel not to put the data value in Column I. The result is just the data bar.
The data bar format doesn’t work well with all data types. This is a good example of trying different formats to see what works best for your data. This is especially true if you have negative values or a tight range.
- Open the state-counts-cf.xlsx sample spreadsheet and click the Example 3 tab.
- Click cell I2.
- Select the whole column by pressing Ctrl +Shift + ↓.
- From the Home tab, click the Conditional Formatting button.
- From the Conditional Formatting drop-down list, select Data Bars.
- From the side menu, select More Rules…
- In the Edit the Rule Description: section, check Show Bar Only.
- Click OK.
How to Highlight a Row
Highlighting outlier cells is great, but sometimes if you have a large spreadsheet, you may not see the colored cells because they’re off-screen. In these situations, it helps to highlight the entire row. That way, regardless of which columns you’re viewing, you know which rows are important. This works best when you have 1 conditional.
A key difference here is we won’t be highlighting a column but the entire spreadsheet. That’s how we get the row effect.
- Open the state-counts-cf.xlsx sample spreadsheet and click the Example 4 tab.
- Click cell I2.
- Select all rows by pressing Ctrl +Shift + ↓ + ←.
- From the Home tab, click the Conditional Formatting button.
- Select New Rule…
- In the Edit Formatting Rule dialog box, select Use a formula to determine which cells to format.
- In the Format values where this formula is true: type your criteria.
- Click the Format button to apply your highlight color.
- Click the Fill tab.
- Select your color.
- Click OK to accept your color.
- Click OK to close the dialog box.
In the example above, I want to highlight any row where the value in column F (Percent total of US population) is greater than 2%. The highlight color is green. I’m also using a mixed cell reference by placing a $ sign before F2 in the formula.
✪ Tip: If you’re not sure you have the correct formula, you can always test it in another column. For example, I could enter in cell H2, this formula =$F2>20%. The H2 cell would be evaluated as either TRUE or FALSE. You could then copy the formula down the column to make sure you get your expected results.
- Click OK.
Find Existing Conditional Formating Rules
Sometimes we’re given a spreadsheet, and you see highlighted cells or rows. But… where are the conditional rules, or did someone manually format these cells? Fortunately, Excel provides a way to see conditional formatting rules. You can use the example spreadsheet to follow along or use your own.
- Open up your spreadsheet.
- From the Home tab, click Conditional Formatting.
- Select Manage Rules… from the drop-down list.
- In the Conditional Formatting Rules Manager dialog box, select your worksheet.
- Click OK.
In the example above, you can see the rule I applied to highlight the row. From here, you could add a rule, edit the rule, or delete it.
Highlighting Tips & Tricks
This tutorial touched on some of the ways you can use conditional formatting to highlight cell values. The best way to learn is to experiment with some data, whether it’s your own or the sample spreadsheet. Here are some other tips for you:
- You can have multiple rules in the same column. For example, you might want to have different range values, be different colors.
- Play around with different formats to see which type works best for your data.
- If you get unexpected results, check to see if multiple conditions are being run and the rule order. You may need to change the order.
- You can set ranges on data bars. For example, if you have a % Complete column, you may want to set a range of 0 to 1.
- You can remove conditional formatting rules with the Clear Rules option.
- Apply your rules after you’ve entered data. Sometimes duplicate rules are created when you insert rows.
Excel’s conditional formatting can make your spreadsheets more useful if used appropriately. People won’t waste time looking for important changes or that “needle in the haystack.” Play around and create your own custom cell styles and conditional formats.
Show Me How Video
To see the above examples, click the image below to be taken to the accompanying video and transcript.
Excel Practice File
- Beginners Guide to Excel XLOOKUP
- How to Use Excel VLOOKUP
- How to Check Excel Cells for Specific Text
- How to Use Flash Fill in Excel
- How to Create an Excel Pivot Table
This tutorial will demonstrate how to highlight cells depending on the answer returned by an IF statement formula using Conditional Formatting in Excel and Google Sheets.
Highlight Cells With Conditional Formatting
A cell can be formatted by conditional formatting based on the value returned by an IF statement on your Excel worksheet.
- First, create the IF statement in Column E.
=IF(D4>C4,”Overdue”,”Ontime”)
- This formula can be copied down to Row 12.
- Now, create a custom formula within the Conditional Formatting rule to set the background color of all the “Overdue” cells to red.
- Select the range you want to apply formatting to.
- In the Ribbon, select Home > Conditional Formatting > New Rule.
- Select Use a formula to determine which cells to format, and enter the formula:
=E4=”OverDue”
- Click on the Format button and select your desired formatting.
- Click OK, and then OK once again to return to the Conditional Formatting Rules Manager.
- Click Apply to apply the formatting to your selected range and then click Close.
The formula entered will return TRUE when the cell contains the word “Overdue” and will therefore format the text in those cells with a background color of red. - To format the “OnTime” cells to green, you can create another rule based on the same range of cells.
- Click Apply to apply to the range.
Highlight Cells If… in Google Sheets
The process to highlight cells that contain an IF Statement in Google Sheets is similar to the process in Excel.
- Highlight the cells you wish to format, and then click on Format > Conditional Formatting.
- The Apply to Range section will already be filled in.
- From the Format Rules section, select Custom Formula and type in the formula.
- Select the fill style for the cells that meet the criteria.
- Click Done to apply the rule.
How to change the color of your cells in function of the value in your cells?
The secret to change the color? A logical test
To change the color with a formula, you MUST create a logical test.
A logical test returns TRUE or FALSE, or also 0 and 1. And it’s exactly what we need to create our own rule.
- The test returns TRUE, then we apply of custom format
- The test returns FALSE, the conditional formatting is not applied
For many people there is a confusion between a logical test and the IF function. The first argument of the IF function is the logical test and it’s just what we need.
Step 1: Test your rule before
I have seen a lot of mistake in my professional career when people wants to create their own rules. My advise is to test your rule in a cell.
For instance, you want to highlight all the cells with a value lower than 15.
So in column C, let’s write the test and see the result
=B2<15
Step 2: Copy your test as conditional formatting rules
- Select the cell where to apply the rule (here B2)
- Copy your formula with a basic copy-paste.
- Open the menu Home > Conditional Formatting > New Rule
- Select the rule type Use a formula to determine which cells to format
- In the text box, paste your test 😀
Step 3: Change the color
Once you have click on the button Format, you can change, the font, the background of the cell, the borders, ….
For instance here, we change only the color of the background when the test is TRUE.
Validate your rule to close the New Rule dialog box
Step 4: Apply the rule to many cells
At this step, the rule applies only for the cell B2. But now, we need to apply the same formula for the range B2:B9
- Open the menu Conditional Formatting > Manage Rules
- When the dialog box opens, you can see that the rule only applies on B2.
- Update this field to write the range of cells to apply the rule
- Now, all the cells where the rule is TRUE are red 😀👍😍
Other examples
Create your own rules to change the color is a very common task in Excel. Here is a list of other articles where we use the same technique.
- Compare 2 columns
- Highlight birthday
- Highlight week-end
- ….
Why it doesn’t work in my workbook 😱😱
One thing is very, very, VERY important is to selected the cell when you create your rule ❗❗❗
If you haven’t selected the correct cells when you have written or pasted your test, the rule applies in the wrong cell.
For instance, here, we have selected the cell B4 when we have pasted the test.
This is the only reason why you can have an issue between the result expected and the result you want 😉👍
Tutorial video
In this video, you will see 3 examples with 3 differente techniques