How to disable Excel's automatic cell reference change after copy/paste?
I've got a massive Excel 2003 spreadsheet I'm working on. There are a lot of very large formulas with a lot of cell references. Here's a simple example.
='Sheet'!AC69+'Sheet'!AC52+'Sheet'!AC53)*$D$3+'Sheet'!AC49
Most of them are more complicated than that, but this gives a good idea of what I'm working with. Few of these cell references are absolute ($s). I'd like to be able to copy these cells to a different location without the cell references changing. I know I can simply use f4 to make the references absolute, but there is a lot of data and I may need to use Fill later. Is there any way to tempo开发者_高级运维rarily disable the cell reference changing on copy-paste/fill without making the references absolute?
EDIT: I just found out that you can do this with VBA by copying the cell contents as text instead of a formula. I'd like to not have to do this though because I want to copy whole rows/columns at once. Is there a simple solution I am missing?
From http://spreadsheetpage.com/index.php/tip/making_an_exact_copy_of_a_range_of_formulas_take_2:
- Put Excel in formula view mode. The easiest way to do this is to press Ctrl+` (that character is a "backwards apostrophe," and is usually on the same key that has the ~ (tilde).
- Select the range to copy.
- Press Ctrl+C
- Start Windows Notepad
- Press Ctrl+V to past the copied data into Notepad
- In Notepad, press Ctrl+A followed by Ctrl+C to copy the text
- Activate Excel and activate the upper left cell where you want to paste the formulas. And, make sure that the sheet you are copying to is in formula view mode.
- Press Ctrl+V to paste.
- Press Ctrl+` to toggle out of formula view mode.
Note: If the paste operation back to Excel doesn't work correctly, chances are that you've used Excel's Text-to-Columns feature recently, and Excel is trying to be helpful by remembering how you last parsed your data. You need to fire up the Convert Text to Columns Wizard. Choose the Delimited option and click Next. Clear all of the Delimiter option checkmarks except Tab.
Or, from http://spreadsheetpage.com/index.php/tip/making_an_exact_copy_of_a_range_of_formulas/:
If you're a VBA programmer, you can simply execute the following code:
With Sheets("Sheet1")
.Range("A11:D20").Formula = .Range("A1:D10").Formula
End With
A very simple solution is to select the range you wish to copy, then Find and Replace (Ctrl + h
), changing =
to another symbol that is not used in your formula (e.g. #
) - thus stopping it from being an active formula.
Then, copy and paste the selected range to it's new location.
Finally, Find and Replace to change #
back to =
in both the original and new range, thus restoring both ranges to being formulae again.
I came to this site looking for an easy way to copy without changing cell references. But now I thnk my own workaround is simpler than most of these methods. My method relies on the fact that Copy changes references but Move doesn't. Here's a simple example.
Assume you have raw data in columns A and B, and a formula in C (e.g. C=A+B) and you want the same formula in column F but Copying from C to F leads to F=D+E.
- Copy contents of C to any empty temporary column, say R. The relative references will change to R=P+Q but ignore this even if it's flagged as an error.
- Go back to C and Move (not Copy) it to F. Formula should be unchanged so F=A+B.
- Now go to R and copy it back to C. Relative reference will revert to C=A+B
- Delete the temporary formula in R.
- Bob's your uncle.
I've done this with a range of cells so I imagine it would work with virtually any level of complexity. You just need an empty area to park the coiped cells. And of course you have to remember where you left them.
This simple trick works: Copy and Paste. Do NOT cut and paste. After you paste, then reselect the part you copied and go to EDIT, slide down to CLEAR, and CLEAR CONTENTS.
Simple workaround I used just now while in a similar situation:
- Make a duplicate of the worksheet.
- Cut + Paste the cells with formulas from the duplicate worksheet (e.g.
Copy of Sheet1
) into the original worksheet. - Remove all occurrences of the the duplicate sheet's name from the newly pasted formulas; e.g. find-and-replace all occurrences of the search term
'Copy of Sheet1'!
with an empty string (i.e. blank). - Delete duplicate worksheet to clean up.
Note: if your sheet name lacks spaces you won't need to use the single quote/apostrophe (').
Your cell references are now copied without being altered.
I think that you're stuck with the workaround you mentioned in your edit.
I would start by converting every formula on the sheet to text roughly like this:
Dim r As Range
For Each r In Worksheets("Sheet1").UsedRange
If (Left$(r.Formula, 1) = "=") Then
r.Formula = "'ZZZ" & r.Formula
End If
Next r
where the 'ZZZ
uses the '
to signify a text value and the ZZZ
as a value that we can look for when we want to convert the text back to being a formula. Obviously if any of your cells actually start with the text ZZZ
then change the ZZZ
value in the VBA macro to something else
When the re-arranging is complete, I would then convert the text back to a formula like this:
For Each r In Worksheets("Sheet1").UsedRange
If (Left$(r.Formula, 3) = "ZZZ") Then
r.Formula = Mid$(r.Formula, 4)
End If
Next r
One real downside to this method is that you can't see the results of any formula while you are re-arranging. You may find that when you convert back from text to formula that you have a slew of #REF
errors for example.
It might be beneficial to work on this in stages and convert back to formulas every so often to check that no catastrophes have occurred
It's common to use find/ replace to disable formulas whilst performing manipulations. For example, copy with transpose. The formula is disabled by placing some placeholder (e.g. "$=") in front of it. Find replace can get rid of these once the manipulation is complete.
This vba just automates the find/ replace for the active sheet.
' toggle forumlas on active sheet as active/ inactive
' by use of "$=" prefix
Sub toggle_active_formulas()
Dim current_calc_method As String
initial_calc_method = Application.Calculation
Application.Calculation = xlCalculationManual
Dim predominant As Integer
Dim c As Range
For Each c In ActiveSheet.UsedRange.Cells
If c.HasFormula Then
predominant = predominant + 1
ElseIf "$=" = Left(c.Value, 2) Then
predominant = predominant - 1
End If
Next c
If predominant > 0 Then
For Each c In ActiveSheet.UsedRange.Cells
On Error Resume Next
If c.HasFormula Then
c.Value = "$" & c.Formula
End If
Next c
Else
For Each c In ActiveSheet.UsedRange.Cells
On Error Resume Next
If "$=" = Left(c.Value, 2) Then
c.Formula = Right(c.Value, Len(c.Value) - 1)
End If
Next c
End If
Application.Calculation = initial_calc_method
End Sub
This macro does the whole job.
Sub Absolute_Reference_Copy_Paste()
'By changing "=" in formulas to "#" the content is no longer seen as a formula.
' C+S+e (my keyboard shortcut)
Dim Dummy As Range
Dim FirstSelection As Range
Dim SecondSelection As Range
Dim SheetFirst As Worksheet
Dim SheetSecond As Worksheet
On Error GoTo Whoa
Application.EnableEvents = False
' Set starting selection variable.
Set FirstSelection = Selection
Set SheetFirst = FirstSelection.Worksheet
' Reset the Find function so the scope of the search area is the current worksheet.
Set Dummy = Worksheets(1).Range("A1:A1").Find("Dummy", LookIn:=xlValues)
' Change "=" to "#" in selection.
Selection.Replace What:="=", Replacement:="#", LookAt:=xlPart, _
SearchOrder:=xlByRows, MatchCase:=False, SearchFormat:=False, ReplaceFormat:=False
' Select the area you want to paste the formulas; must be same size as original
selection and outside of the original selection.
Set SecondSelection = Application.InputBox("Select a range", "Obtain Range Object", Type:=8)
Set SheetSecond = SecondSelection.Worksheet
' Copy the original selection and paste it into the newly selected area. The active
selection remains FirstSelection.
FirstSelection.Copy SecondSelection
' Restore "=" in FirstSelection.
Selection.Replace What:="#", Replacement:="=", LookAt:=xlPart, _
SearchOrder:=xlByRows, MatchCase:=False, SearchFormat:=False, ReplaceFormat:=False
' Select SecondSelection.
SheetSecond.Activate
SecondSelection.Select
' Restore "=" in SecondSelection.
Selection.Replace What:="#", Replacement:="=", LookAt:=xlPart, _
SearchOrder:=xlByRows, MatchCase:=False, SearchFormat:=False, ReplaceFormat:=False
' Return active selection to the original area: FirstSelection.
SheetFirst.Activate
FirstSelection.Select
Application.EnableEvents = True
Exit Sub
Whoa:
' If something goes wrong after "=" has been changed in FirstSelection, restore "=".
FirstSelection.Select
Selection.Replace What:="#", Replacement:="=", LookAt:=xlPart, _
SearchOrder:=xlByRows, MatchCase:=False, SearchFormat:=False, ReplaceFormat:=False
End Sub
Note that you must match the size and shape of the original selection when you make your new selection.
I found this solution which automates @Alistair Collins solution.
Basically you will change the = in any formula to * then do the paste after that you will change it back
Dim cell As Range
msgResult = MsgBox("Yes to lock" & vbNewLine & "No unlock ", vbYesNoCancel + vbQuestion, "Forumula locker")
If msgResult = vbNo Then
For Each cell In Range("A1:i155")
If InStr(1, cell.Value, "*") > 0 Then
cell.Formula = Replace(cell.Formula, "*", "=")
End If
Next cell
ElseIf msgResult = vbYes Then
For Each cell In Range("A1:i155")
If cell.HasFormula = True Then
cell.Formula = Replace(cell.Formula, "=", "*")
End If
Next cell
End If
Try this: Left-click the tab, making a copy of the whole sheet, then cut the cells you want to keep the same and paste them into your original worksheet.
I found another workaround that is very simple: 1. Cut the contents 2. Paste them in the new location 3. Copy the contents that you just pasted into the new location you want. 4. Undo the Cut-Paste operation, putting the original contents back where you got them. 5. Paste the contents from the clipboard to the same location. These contents will have the original references.
It looks like a lot, but is super fast with keyboard shortcuts: 1. Ctrl-x, 2. Ctrl-v, 3. Ctrl-c, 4. Ctrl-z, 5. Ctrl-v
Haven't check in Excel, but this works in Libreoffice4:
The whole thing of address rewriting comes during consecutive
(a1) cut
(a2) paste
You need to interrupt the consecutiveness by putting something in-between:
(b1) cut
(b2) select some empty cells (more than 1) and drag(move) them
(b3) paste
Step (b2) is where the cell that is about to update itself stops the tracking. Quick and simple.
Click on the cell you want to copy. In the formula bar, highlight the formula.
Press Ctrl C
.
Press escape (to take you out of actively editing that formula).
Choose new cell. Ctrl V.
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