Nick, It evaluates to #NAME as it's a broken formula of some type.
For my purposes, I can just delete the names from the workbook now that I've found out where this odd bug is. But you might consider what the formula parser should do. Thanks, Brian On Thu, Dec 3, 2015 at 2:42 PM, Nick Burch <[email protected]> wrote: > On Thu, 3 Dec 2015, Brian Milnes wrote: > >> As I don't know how to correctly elide the format, I'll send you the long >> text. >> >> It seems to be a defined name, perhaps some type of print area? >> > > Looks to be a named range > > What do you get if, on the first sheet, you just type into a cell > =lsTipoEntidad > > (lsTipoEntidad is the name of the range) > > <definedName >> name="lsTipoEntidad">[1]!tblTipoEntidad[Llave]</definedName> >> > > Thanks > > Nick > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: [email protected] > For additional commands, e-mail: [email protected] > > -- Brian Milnes CIO XBRL Cloud 206 406 7576
