A cell reference or a cell address is a way to define a cell on a worksheet, it is formed by combining a column letter and a row number. To refer any if the cell on a worksheet (in any formula/ to copy the cell) we use cell reference.
Example: To refer to the cell present in row 2 & column D, cell reference is: D2, where D is column letter & 2 is the row number.
Relative Cell Reference :
By default, every cell is a relative reference. Example: If you refer to cell D2 in cell F2, you refer to a cell that is 2 columns to the left (F-D = 3) in the same row number 2.
The relative relation for that location will be updated automatically when it is copied to other positions in a worksheet. (Because a relative cell reference defines an offset to another cell – say, 2 columns left within the same row in the example mentioned above).
If you copy F2 to F4, then F4 = D4 (as F2 = D2, i.e., 2 columns left in the same row), So D4 is two columns left to F4 in the same row 4.
Absolute Cell Reference :
There are times when the cell reference must stay the same when copying or using AutoFill. Using dollar signs, a column and/or row reference can be kept constant. So, to get an absolute reference from a relative, we can use the dollar sign ($) characters.
We use an absolute reference to refer to an actual fixed location on a worksheet whenever copying is done. The reference here is locked such that rows and columns do not shift when copied.
Dollar ($) before row fix the row & before the column fixes the column.
Example: Fixing/Locking both – row & column – Say if we want to lock row 2 & column D, we will use $D$2 as:
F2 = $D$2, when copied to F4, F4 also becomes = $D$2.
Excel Mixed Cell Reference :
A mixed cell reference is a mixture of absolute & relative reference, i.e., an absolute column and relative row, or an absolute row and relative column. To get an absolute column or absolute row, you can put the $ before the column letter or before the row number.
Example: $D2 is relative for row 2 but absolute for column D, and D$2 is absolute for row 2 but relative for column D.
Here Dollar ($) before row number fixes/locks the row & before the column name fixes/locks the column.
Example 1: When we fix the only row: If we have F2 =$D2 then :
We used $ before the column number, so we are locking the only column here.
When F2 is copied to H4, then H4 = $D4 because the column is the same here, i.e., column letter D But the row is relative (i.e. the same row in which copying is done).
Example 2: When we fix /lock the only row : If we have E2 = C2*A$2 then :
When E2 is copied to E3, E3 = C3*A$2 (not C3*A3) because the row (number 2) has been locked already.
I hope you now know the relative and absolute cell references, how to use $ sign and how to use mixed cell references.
Last Updated :
27 May, 2021
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