ISNONTEXTChecks whether a value is non-textual.
Sample Usage
ISNONTEXT(A2)
ISNONTEXT(“cat”)
Syntax
ISNONTEXT(value)
value – The text to be checked.
ISNONTEXT returns FALSE if this is a text value or a reference to a cell containing a text value and TRUE otherwise.
When value is a reference to an empty cell, ISNONTEXT will return TRUE.
When value is an empty string, ISNONTEXT will return FALSE, as the empty string is considered text.
Notes
Nonprinting characters and whitespace count as text, so when ISNONTEXT is called on a cell containing such characters, the function will return FALSE even though the cell appears empty.
Numbers input as text, e.g. “1234” count as text, and will cause ISNONTEXT to return FALSE.
ISNONTEXT(value) is the logical equivalent of NOT(ISTEXT(value))
This function is most often used in conjunction with IF in conditional statements.
See Also
ISTEXT: Checks whether a value is text.
ISREF: Checks whether a value is a valid cell reference.
ISODD: Checks whether the provided value is odd.
ISNUMBER: Checks whether a value is a number.
ISNA: Checks whether a value is the error `#N/A`.
ISLOGICAL: Checks whether a value is `TRUE` or `FALSE`.
ISEVEN: Checks whether the provided value is even.
ISERROR: Checks whether a value is an error.
ISERR: Checks whether a value is an error other than `#N/A`.
ISBLANK: Checks whether the referenced cell is empty.
IF: Returns one value if a logical expression is `TRUE` and another if it is `FALSE`.
Examples