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Tips.Net > ExcelTips Home > Tools > Using Check Boxes

Using Check Boxes

Summary: One of the form controls you can add to a worksheet is a check box. This tip explains how to add and configure this handy control. (This tip works with Microsoft Excel 97, Excel 2000, Excel 2002, and Excel 2003.)

Many different dialog boxes and forms in the Windows world utilize check boxes. They are handy if you want to provide a way for a user to choose between two options, such as true or false; yes or no. Excel allows you to use check boxes in your worksheets, if desired.

For instance, you may have developed a financial projection worksheet in which you can either account for a particular acquisition or not. In this case, you might want to place a check box at the top of the worksheet. You can then link the status of this check box to another cell, so that if the check box is selected, the value of the cell is True; if it is not selected, the value of the cell is False.

To place a check box control in your worksheet, follow these steps:

  1. Make sure the Forms toolbar is displayed.
  2. Click on the Check Box tool on the Forms toolbar.
  3. In your worksheet area, click and drag to define the rectangle that will hold the check box and the label beside the check box.
  4. Once the check box is placed in the worksheet, you can move the mouse cursor into the label area and change the label to anything desired.
  5. With the check box control you just placed still selected, click on the Control Properties tool in the Forms toolbar. You will see the Format Control dialog box
  6. Make sure the Control tab is selected. (Click here to see a related figure.)
  7. In the Cell Link field, specify the address of the cell to which this check box should be linked. (When the check box changes, the contents of this cell change; when the contents of the cell are changed, the check box reflects that change--it is a bi-directional relationship.)
  8. 8 Click on OK.

Tip #3246 applies to Microsoft Excel versions: 97 | 2000 | 2002 | 2003


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