Simple way to remove blank cells dynamic dropdown list Excel
There is another way. Create a dynamically-expanding named range. Then use the range to define the data validation list.
To create your dynamically-expanding range, insert this in the named range box and give it a name:
=OFFSET($A$1,0,0,COUNTA($A:$A),1)
$A$1 should be replaced with the top cell of your range. $A$A should be replaced with the column(s) the range is in.
OFFSET points the named range at a range of cells. COUNTA() is in the fourth position of the OFFSET formula, which sets the height of the range. It counts the number of non-blank cells. As a result, when you add a value, the fourth value of the OFFSET formula increases and you get an expanding range.
Note, this does not work if your named range has blank cells interspersed.
OFFSET formula from excel-easy.com.
After some more research I found a solution. In the cell where my information is filled I added a name using the name Manager and I added this formula that I adapted from this article:
=DropList!$J$1:INDEX(DropList!$J$1:$J$10000,SUMPRODUCT(--(DropList!$J$1:$J$10000<>"")))
It did what I needed without the need of adding 2 extra cell, even though the line of code is rather complex.
I know this thread is dead but I found a simpler solution which only requires you to create a single named range. It also works even if blank cells are interspersed in the source data, and expands as the source data expands.
First create your dynamically expanding named range using the formula given above:
=OFFSET($A$1,0,0,COUNTA($A:$A),1)
This will includes the values you want in your drop-down, as well as blank cells. Next, in a separate cell, enter the following:
=FILTER(Your_Range, Your_Range <> "")
The result will be your source data with no blanks. This will spill into adjacent cells. Now can reference this single cell as your data validation list, as long as you add "#" to the end of the cell reference. This tells excel to include all the spilled values in the list.
Benefits:
- If your source data named range is dynamic, the drop-down list will expand with this range, and you don't have to worry about updating a second named range.
- You can easily filter more data, and it doesn't matter if blank cells are interspersed.
- Combined with the SORT and UNIQUE functions, you can further improve how your data is represented in the drop-down list.
I couldn't find a solution this simple anywhere else, so I hope someone finds this useful.