That's very different, and very difficult. See
http://www.xldynamic.com/source/xld.CFConditions.html
--
HTH
Bob
(there's no email, no snail mail, but somewhere should be gmail in my addy)
"J@Y" wrote in message
...
I need to test the cell to see whether it is colored by conditional
formatting in VB.
"Bob Phillips" wrote:
You would see it if it succeeded because the colour changes.
--
HTH
Bob
(there's no email, no snail mail, but somewhere should be gmail in my
addy)
"J@Y" wrote in message
...
How would you test the result?
"Bob Phillips" wrote:
Because that is the condition being tested, not the result.
--
HTH
Bob
(there's no email, no snail mail, but somewhere should be gmail in my
addy)
"J@Y" wrote in message
...
When I use conditional format to highlight cells, I found that the
FormatConditions(1).Interior.ColorIndex were changed to the same
number
no
matter if the cell is highlighted for not. So a cell with a yellow
highlight
and a cell that looks white both have
FormatConditions(1).Interior.ColorIndex
= 6. Why is that?