Here's the ever-so-simple task... use a macro to add two cells in a range,
all with numerical values - two crummy cells! And then get the result in a
new row (right under the cells in question) in bold text. 2 cells!! Wiith
simple numbers in them!!

Luckily they are in the same column in the same workbook! Whew... that
makes it sooo easy, don't it?

However... it has been a long time since I've used an Excel macro, and I
forgot how I solved this before. It took me hours of trial & error & futility
before, trying to use MS Help in Excel, online, and in Visual basic debugger,
etc. Eventually trial & error won out.

(can't microsoft just tell you how to fix this stuff when it doesn't work? -
a bunch of simple examples, maybe???? - nutty idea, a debugger that accept
requests in simple english, is interactive if necessary, and will solve your
problem in less than 6 hours??)

The problem is that when I use the macro, it assigns a fixed range for the
cells I want to add up. I can't run the macro again, because the darn thing
WON'T WORK (BYW, not shouting - using caps for emphasis)... here's the code:

Sub Macro7()
'
' Macro7 Macro
' Macro recorded 2/15/2006 by mark.diaz
'
' Keyboard Shortcut: Ctrl+z
'
Selection.EntireRow.Insert
Range("C24:C26").Select
Range("C26").Activate
ActiveCell.FormulaR1C1 = "=SUM(R[-2]C:R[-1]C)"
Range("C26").Select
Selection.Font.Bold = True
End Sub

As you can see the range for the cells is "fixed" - my term, because I don't
know what else to call it.

What I REALLY want to do is set set the cursor at the lower of the 2 (wild
thought, maybe even 3 or 4) cells, then hit Ctrl-z, and have the macro open a
new row witht he sum in bold text. That's the super simple macro.

Ideally, I would like to have a loop with 5 or 6 sets of 2-cell groups, and
have them all totaled up in bold.

is this too much to ask?

I have been working on this problem off and on since 11 AM, and it's now 5
PM. That's 6 hours for the numerically challenged.

I can't believe how difficult microsoft makes it to adapt their macros to do
the simplest tasks. I find it humiliating and frustrating to be defeated by
software that claims to be useful.

At any rate, if you can help me with this, I will be eternally grateful - or
at least until I try to write my next macro...

Mark
Boston, MA
direct: [email protected]