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Add Row duplicates Checkboxes from previous row

I have a spreadsheet with several Checkbox columns. If I add a new Row, it creates a blank row, but it duplicates the checked-or-unchecked status of the Checkboxes in the row above it.

Similarly, if I create a new Column, it duplicates the checked-or-unchecked status of the Checkboxes in the previous column.

Is there any way I can create a new Row or Column with blank checkboxes, regardless of whether the neighboring checkboxes are checked or unchecked?

MacBookPro (Intel), Mac OS X (10.5.4)

Posted on Sep 21, 2008 1:30 PM

Reply
32 replies

Sep 22, 2008 1:40 AM in response to Ric Donato

Hello Ric

I understood that if a check box is available and checked in C20,
inserting a row below or above row 20 creates, in the new row, a checked checkbox.
Same behavior if we insert a column to the left or to the right of column C.

On my machines I get this behavior which is the designed one.

This time, we met an user which don't like that the new line reproduce the existing one but, if Apple made the choice to build the row with unchecked boxes, we would encounter user complaining because it doesn't reproduce the existing one. Two ways where possible, Apple choose one, PERIOD

Yvan KOENIG (from FRANCE lundi 22 septembre 2008 10:40:17)

Sep 22, 2008 1:48 AM in response to KOENIG Yvan

I get the same behavior as described by Yvan. Since the goal is a group of unchecked boxes, all I can suggest is a second step:

Select all the newly created cells formatted as checkboxes & in the Cells Inspector, click the "Unchecked" radio button. This at least saves one the effort of removing the check marks from the cells one at a time.

Sep 22, 2008 2:10 AM in response to KOENIG Yvan

KOENIG Yvan wrote:
Two ways where possible, Apple choose one, PERIOD


Actually, a third possibility would be a user preference or modifier key to cause newly created rows not to inherit the values of their neighbors. If the O.P. thinks that would be useful, feedback could be sent to Apple requesting that in a future version of the application.

Personally, I doubt that enough users would find it useful enough to justify adding it to the feature set, but one never knows.

Sep 22, 2008 2:25 AM in response to R C-R

If I understang well, the OP is not asking for a blank row but for a row where the box will be unchecked even if the preceeding row contains checked boxes.

If we want to be able to insert blank rows, the feature already exists.
Keep a blank row at the bottom of the table.
If you want to insert a "pre-filled" row select the laste filled one and apply "Insert a row below"
If you want to insert a blank row, select the existing blank one and apply "Insert a row above".

Yvan KOENIG (from FRANCE lundi 22 septembre 2008 11:25:40)

Sep 22, 2008 3:18 AM in response to R C-R

Earlier I wrote:
I get the same behavior as described by Yvan.


I have just noticed that this inheritance of the checked or unchecked value in the new row occurs _only if_ the the entire column is formatted as checkboxes. If any cell in the column is formatted as something else, the new row inherits the format of its predecessor row, but when that is the checkbox format, the new cell's checkbox is unchecked.

IOW, the format of the predecessor row is always inherited, but the checkbox value is inherited if & only if the entire column (less any header column) is formatted as checkboxes.

I assume this explains why Ric Donato got different results.

Sep 22, 2008 5:04 AM in response to KOENIG Yvan

I don't understand. In an earlier post, you said:

I understood that if a check box is available and checked in C20, inserting a row below or above row 20 creates, in the new row, a checked checkbox.


Your current comment seems to contradict that.

What I get is as I described: the checked/unchecked value is inherited if & only if the entire column is formatted as checkboxes. If not, only the checkbox format is inherited & the new value is always unchecked, regardless of the value of the "parent" cell's checkbox.

This occurs whether or not I use the 'insert a row above/below' popup menu items from the arrow that appears when the cursor is hovered over a row label, drag the tab at the bottom right of the table downward to create one or multiple new rows, or with any other method I know of to create new row(s).

Sep 22, 2008 12:51 PM in response to R C-R

Hi Yvan and R C-R,
When I did my original post I didn't format the entire column as checkboxes. My thought process was, "why would a user format an entire column as such, surely they'd have something at the bottom for a calculation of the checkbox results". For my testing I formated a number of rows, not all, as checkboxes that's why my results were different than both of yours. My thinking wasn't enough in depth for the OP scenario.

When the entire column is formated as checkboxes, check a box then insert a row (above or below), this inserted new row checkbox is checked.

Having X number of cells formated as checkboxes, not entire column, then insert (above or below) another row, this inserted new row checkbox is uncheck.

For me when I want it unchecked I uncheck it, when I want it checked I check it; this checked unchecked is a non issue. However, when one has inserted many rows it would be an issue.

Cordially,
RicD

Sep 22, 2008 3:18 PM in response to Ric Donato

Ric Donato wrote:
For me when I want it unchecked I uncheck it, when I want it checked I check it; this checked unchecked is a non issue. However, when one has inserted many rows it would be an issue.


As I mentioned, if many rows are involved, selecting all of their cells with (& only with) the checkbox format allows one to globally change them to unchecked (or checked) status using the Cells Inspector's two radio buttons.

I suppose this could also be useful in any other situation in which one wants to change the value of a large group of checkboxes at once.

Sep 22, 2008 4:38 PM in response to R C-R

Hi R C-R,
Highlight the group of checkbox cells, contiguous or noncontiguous then: Cell inspector > Cell Format > Checkbox, choose Checked or Unchecked—those steps should have been include.

My comment "However, when one has inserted many rows it would be an issue." was that a person would then have to make that adjustment, not that it's difficult. Yes I should have put included the above steps, also been more exacting with my comment.

Cordially,
RicD

Sep 22, 2008 5:05 PM in response to Ric Donato

No worries, Ric. I just wanted to make sure the alternative was well understood.

Frankly, the difficulty of clearly explaining the conditions for which each behavior occurs became for me a challenge that I was determined not to let defeat me. I hope I have succeeded, at least well enough that others understand it.

Add Row duplicates Checkboxes from previous row

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