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Select Liston (A1:A10). Click the Home tab, click Conditional Formatting in the Styles group, and choose New Rule from the dropdown list. From the Select A Rule Type list, choose the Use A Formula to Determine Which Cells To Format option. Enter =COUNT IF(List,A1)=0 in the Formula field.
6:43 8:33 Suggested clip How to Use Conditional Formatting to Compare 2 Excel Lists YouTubeStart of suggested client of suggested clip How to Use Conditional Formatting to Compare 2 Excel Lists
1:34 5:15 Suggested clip How to compare 2 columns in Excel for matches and differences YouTubeStart of suggested client of suggested clip How to compare 2 columns in Excel for matches and differences
Select two list you compare if equal to each other, and click Home > Conditional Formatting > New Rule. 3. Click OK > OK. Then the cells will be colored if the two cells are not equal to each other.
The greater than or equal to operator (>=) returns TRUE if the first value is greater than or equal to the second value. 1. For example, take a look at the formula in cell C1 below. Explanation: the formula returns TRUE because the value in cell A1 is greater than or equal to the value in cell B1.
Select cells in both lists (select first list, then hold CTRL key and then select the second) Go to Conditional Formatting > Highlight Cells Rules > Duplicate Values. Press ok. There is nothing do here. Go out and play!
First, select the range A1:A18 and name it finalist, select the range B1:B20 and name it seconds. Next, select the range A1:A18. On the Home tab, in the Styles group, click Conditional Formatting. Click New Rule. Select 'Use a formula to determine which cells to format'. Enter the formula =COUNT IF(seconds,A1)=0.
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