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Tips.Net > ExcelTips Home > Formatting > Conditional Formatting > Changing Coordinate Colors

Changing Coordinate Colors

Summary: Want to change the colors used by Excel for the column letters and row numbers on a worksheet? You can’t do it directly in Excel; instead you need to make an adjustment in Windows itself. (This tip works with Microsoft Excel 97, Excel 2000, Excel 2002, and Excel 2003.)

Take a look at an Excel worksheet. See the column headers that appear above each column and the row headers that appear at the left side of each row? These help you to maintain your bearings within a worksheet. These coordinates normally appear as black text on a grey button background. At some point you may desire to change these to a different color.

Excel doesn't allow you to specify colors to use for the coordinates. It is possible for Excel to change the color itself, however. For instance, when you use filtering on data in a worksheet, Excel will show the row numbers in blue if the data is being filtered. Other than this, it is not possible to make a change within Excel.

You can make a change in Windows that will result in different coordinate colors. What Excel does is to use the color you specify within Windows for 3D objects as its coordinate color. To change this particular color, follow these steps:

  1. Get out of Excel.
  2. Right-click anywhere in your Windows desktop. (Make sure you right-click on the desktop itself, not on any of the objects on the desktop.) Windows presents a Context menu.
  3. Choose Properties from the Context menu. Windows displays the Display Properties dialog box.
  4. Make sure the Appearance tab is selected. (Click here to see a related figure.)
  5. Click on the OK button in the middle of the dialog box. (This is not the OK button to close the dialog box, but the one in the middle of the display area.) This action changes the Item drop-down list to 3D Objects.
  6. Click on the drop-down arrow in the Color control to the right of the Item drop-down list. You will see a palette of colors from which you can choose.
  7. Click on the color you want used by Windows for any 3D objects it displays.
  8. Click on OK (at the bottom of the dialog box) to save your change.

Now, when you start Excel, the color of the row and column headers will match whatever you chose in the above steps. You should note, however, that this color change will affect other dialog boxes and controls displayed by other Windows programs, not just by Excel.

Tip #2932 applies to Microsoft Excel versions: 97 | 2000 | 2002 | 2003


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