Whilst I know how to sort and manage data within multiple cells, I wonder if any bright spark out there can help me, please?
I have a large spread sheet on my desk, which shows the result of lots of insurance survey reports, made of a client's many factories.
In essence, individual features (sprinkler protection, fire appliances, business recovery plan, housekeeping etc) for each of the 150 factories are colour coded, BLUE for excellent, GREEN for better than average, YELLOW for average, AMBER for worse than average, RED for very poor. There is no data in any of the cells, just the in-fill colour. This means the spreadsheet ends up like a large, multi-coloured chess board.
This is good as it gives the client's senior management (who know B all about insurance) a very good snap shot of the overall quality of 150 factories. Unless they are colour blind, they can quickly spot on the red coloured cells or whatever and can see what the problem is.
However, I want to quickly work out how many cells are coloured red, green, blue, amber, yellow.
For instance, if I know the total number of cells is 1,500 and that 10 are red (very bad) that is 0.66%, which means that 99.34% are better than very bad. I don't want to count individual cells, though as that is very tedious.
Is there anyway to sort or count cells that have no data, but are simply in-filled with a colour? If so, how?
Many thanks,
Richard
I have a large spread sheet on my desk, which shows the result of lots of insurance survey reports, made of a client's many factories.
In essence, individual features (sprinkler protection, fire appliances, business recovery plan, housekeeping etc) for each of the 150 factories are colour coded, BLUE for excellent, GREEN for better than average, YELLOW for average, AMBER for worse than average, RED for very poor. There is no data in any of the cells, just the in-fill colour. This means the spreadsheet ends up like a large, multi-coloured chess board.
This is good as it gives the client's senior management (who know B all about insurance) a very good snap shot of the overall quality of 150 factories. Unless they are colour blind, they can quickly spot on the red coloured cells or whatever and can see what the problem is.
However, I want to quickly work out how many cells are coloured red, green, blue, amber, yellow.
For instance, if I know the total number of cells is 1,500 and that 10 are red (very bad) that is 0.66%, which means that 99.34% are better than very bad. I don't want to count individual cells, though as that is very tedious.
Is there anyway to sort or count cells that have no data, but are simply in-filled with a colour? If so, how?
Many thanks,
Richard

can understand it all 