![]() Supposing row A2:B2 have applied two conditional formatting, if A2>B2, fill red background color, if A2 Conditional Formatting > New Rule. If there are rules in the row already, just directly jump to the step 4.Ģ. ![]() If you are using Excel 2013 or later versions, you can use the AutoFill handle to apply the conditional rule to adjacent rows. Then this conditional formatting rule will be applied to each row in the new range. In the Conditional Formatting Rules Manager dialog, find the rule you applied to A2:B2, change the range as you need in Applies to section, and click OK. Keep A2:B2 selected, click Home > Conditional Formatting > Manage Rules.ĥ. Now the row A2:B2 is applied conditional formatting.Ĥ. Click Format button to go to the Format Cells dialog, and then you can choose one formatting type as you need. In the New Formatting Rule dialog, select Use a formula to determine which cells to format from Select a Rule Type section, then type =$A2>$B2 into the textbox under Format values where this formula is true.ģ. ![]() If there are rules in the row already, just directly jump to the step 4.Ģ. Select A2:B2, then click Home > Conditional Formatting > New Rule. Firstly, apply the conditional formatting to A2:B2. Method A Change the Applies to in Conditional Formatting Rules Managerįor instance, here you want to apply the fill background color to the cells if A2>B2, A3>B3, …, An>Bn with conditional formatting.ġ.
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