Excel gurus love to tell you, "Always format your data as a table." While that's usually solid advice, it's not always the best move. In some scenarios, a simple range outperforms a table entirely.
The list of iconic coffee tables that every design buff already knows is well established. It includes your Eileen Grays, your Noguchis, your Marcel Breuers. They're the sort of coffee tables that ...
Dim sF As String, sR As String, FR As Integer, k As Integer If Len(Cells(i, 4)) - Len(WorksheetFunction.Substitute(Cells(i, 4), "[", "")) > 1 Then Cells(i, 1) = Cells ...