Description
Just like a thermal camera exposes hot and cold spots in your home, a Color Scale Conditional Format visually reveals patterns and trends in your data:
- A 2-Color Scale Conditional Format uses one color for the minimum value and another for the maximum value, with a gradient filling the range of values in between.
- A 3-Color Scale Conditional Format adds a midpoint color (Minimum50th PercentileMaximum), giving you an extra layer of detail for values between the extreme values.
Create a Color Scale Conditional Format in SpreadsheetGear by calling the IFormatConditions.AddColorScale(int colorScaleType) method on the range you want to apply the conditional format to, passing in either 2 or 3 for the colorScaleType value, for instance:
IFormatCondition cf = worksheet.Cells["A1:D10"].FormatConditions.AddColorScale(2);Additional tweaks to the Color Scale can be made by accessing the IColorScale object via IFormatCondition.ColorScale. Each individual "criterion" in the Color Scale is accessed through IColorScale.ColorScaleCriteria[...] collection. The below sample modifies the default 2-Color Scale behavior of automatically detecting the maximum / minimum values in the applied range to explicitly settings these values to a minimum of 0 and maximum of 100.