132
votes

I would like to write an IF statement, where the cell is left blank if the condition is FALSE. Note that, if the following formula is entered in C1 (for which the condition is false) for example:

 =IF(A1=1,B1,"")

and if C1 is tested for being blank or not using =ISBLANK(C1), this would return FALSE, even if C1 seems to be blank. This means that the =IF(A1=1,B1,"") formula does not technically leave the cells blank if the condition is not met.

Any thoughts as to a way of achieving that? Thanks,

15
That's because it's not blank. It has a formula in it. Try this =C1="" or if you want to get really crazy =IF(OR(C1="",ISBLANK(C1)),TRUE,FALSE) - Stepan1010
@Stepan1010 No need to get that crazy because OR(C1="",ISBLANK(C1)) is equivalent. - Museful
Here is a way to get a true empty blank if condition is met: stackoverflow.com/a/39351425/1903793 - Przemyslaw Remin
@Museful, they aren't strictly equivalent. C1="" will work for both scenarios, but ISBLANK(C1) will return false if C1 contains a "" from an IF formula. Your response made it sound like you could use either one in any situation. - pbarney

15 Answers

45
votes

Try this instead

=IF(ISBLANK(C1),TRUE,(TRIM(C1)=""))

This will return true for cells that are either truly blank, or contain nothing but white space.

See this post for a few other options.

edit

To reflect the comments and what you ended up doing: Instead of evaluating to "" enter another value such as 'deleteme' and then search for 'deleteme' instead of blanks.

=IF(ISBLANK(C1),TRUE,(TRIM(C1)="deleteme"))
69
votes

Unfortunately, there is no formula way to result in a truly blank cell, "" is the best formulas can offer.

I dislike ISBLANK because it will not see cells that only have "" as blanks. Instead I prefer COUNTBLANK, which will count "" as blank, so basically =COUNTBLANK(C1)>0 means that C1 is blank or has "".

If you need to remove blank cells in a column, I would recommend filtering on the column for blanks, then selecting the resulting cells and pressing Del. After which you can remove the filter.

23
votes

I wanted to add that there is another possibility - to use the function na().

e.g. =if(a2 = 5,"good",na());

This will fill the cell with #N/A and if you chart the column, the data won't be graphed. I know it isn't "blank" as such, but it's another possibility if you have blank strings in your data and "" is a valid option.

Also, count(a:a) will not count cells which have been set to n/a by doing this.

2
votes

If you want to use a phenomenical (with a formula in it) blank cell to make an arithmetic/mathematical operation, all you have to do is use this formula:

=N(C1)

assuming C1 is a "blank" cell

2
votes

You could try this.

=IF(A1=1,B1,TRIM(" "))

If you put this formula in cell C1, then you could test if this cell is blank in another cells

=ISBLANK(C1)

You should see TRUE. I've tried on Microsoft Excel 2013. Hope this helps.

0
votes

I've found this workaround seems to do the trick:

Modify your original formula:

=IF(A1=1,B1,"filler")

Then select the column, search and replace "filler" with nothing. The cells you want to be blank/empty are actually empty and if you test with "ISBLANK" it will return TRUE. Not the most elegant, but it's quick and it works.

0
votes

The easiest solution is to use conditional formatting if the IF Statement comes back false to change the font of the results cell to whatever color background is. Yes, technically the cell isn't blank, but you won't be able to see it's contents.

0
votes

This shall work (modification on above, workaround, not formula)

Modify your original formula: =IF(A1=1,B1,"filler")

Put filter on spreadsheet, choose only "filler" in column B, highlight all the cells with "filler" in them, hit delete, remove filter

0
votes

You can do something like this to show blank space:

=IF(AND((E2-D2)>0)=TRUE,E2-D2," ")

Inside if before first comma is condition then result and return value if true and last in value as blank if condition is false

0
votes

The formula in C1

=IF(A1=1,B1,"")

is either giving an answer of "" (which isn't treated as blank) or the contents of B1.

If you want the formula in D1 to show TRUE if C1 is "" and FALSE if C1 has something else in then use the formula

=IF(C2="",TRUE,FALSE)

instead of ISBLANK

0
votes

Here is what I do

=IF(OR(ISBLANK(AH38),AH38=""),"",IF(AI38=0,0,AH38/AI38))

Use the OR condition OR(ISBLANK(cell), cell="")

0
votes

I think all you need to do is to set the value of NOT TRUE condition to make it show any error then you filter the errors with IFNA().

Here is what your formula should look like =ifna(IF(A1=1,B1,NA()))

Here is a sheet that returns blanks from if condition : https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/15kWd7oPWQmGgYD_PLz9YpIldwnKWoXPHtHQAT3ulqVc/edit?usp=sharing

Nope ... that only works for Googlesheets ... not Excel.

-2
votes

To Validate data in column A for Blanks

Step 1: Step 1: B1=isblank(A1)

Step 2: Drag the formula for the entire column say B1:B100; This returns Ture or False from B1 to B100 depending on the data in column A

Step 3: CTRL+A (Selct all), CTRL+C (Copy All) , CRTL+V (Paste all as values)

Step4: Ctrl+F ; Find and replace function Find "False", Replace "leave this blank field" ; Find and Replace ALL

There you go Dude!

-3
votes

Instead of using "", use 0. Then use conditional formating to color 0 to the backgrounds color, so that it appears blank.

Since blank cells and 0 will have the same behavior in most situations, this may solve the issue.

-3
votes

This should should work: =IF(A1=1, B1)

The 3rd argument stating the value of the cell if the condition is not met is optional.