Today I got an interesting question from a customer using Excel for Mac 2011. She wanted to know if she could use Conditional Formatting to color a cell based on the contents of another cell. In her case, she has notes about employees written in a cell, and wanted to call attention to their salary if there were any notes for that person. To do this,. Click on the first salary cell that you would color if the row has a note. Click on Conditional Formatting.
Highlighting the row and column that are common to the active cell requires a simple VBA event procedure and two conditional formatting rules.
![Excel For Mac Highlight Row Conditional Formatting Excel For Mac Highlight Row Conditional Formatting](/uploads/1/2/5/6/125632498/284100023.png)
Choose New Rule. Drop down the Style option and change it to Classic. Drop down the next option and select Use a formula to determine which cells to format. Enter the formula as =(N3””), with N3 being the first cell with a potential memo in it. This tells Excel to use the formatting if the cell does not equal null (is not empty).
Edit the formatting to your liking (text color, fill color). Close the dialog box. Click back on the cell. Use the AutoFill Handle (the little square in the bottom right corner of the cell outline) to replicate the cell down the entire column. Any of the cells that have notes will now turn colors. Using Conditional Formatting to automatically highlight cells based on criteria is a powerful way to create dynamic spreadsheets! Need to learn Excel quickly?
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