Samsung reintroduced its well regarded Good Lock app, so now you can tweak parts of your Galaxy's interface without the need for root or other labor-intensive mods. Thanks to an awesome add-on, you can even tidy up you phone's status bar — so if you've always wanted to get rid of that pesky NFC 'N' icon or any other indicator at the top of your display, you're now just a few taps away.
QuickStar is the add-on app that works in conjunction with Good Lock to give you the ability to tweak numerous system settings on your phone's TouchWiz UI. Chief among these is a neat feature which allows you to remove any icon from your status bar to give it a cleaner look.
- Don't Miss: 10 Settings You Can Tweak to Make TouchWiz More Tolerable
MHWorld MH:World has Monster Health-bar (self.MonsterHunter). That it beats faster the lower the monster health is. EDIT: This is incorrect ^ it just shows if a monster is enraged or not, not related to health. The Blue Pulse is nothing more than a raged mode indicator.
Progress bars are pretty much ubiquitous these days; we’ve even seen them on some water coolers. A progress bar provides instant feedback on a given process, so why not bring some of that graphical pizzazz into your spreadsheet, using Excel’s Conditional Formatting feature?
Progress Bars in Excel 2010
“Bar-type” conditional formatting has been around since Excel 2007. But Excel 2007 would only make bars with a gradient – the bar would get paler and paler towards the end, so even at 100% it wouldn’t really look like 100%. Excel 2010 addresses this by adding Solid Fill bars that maintain one color all throughout. These are ideal for creating progress bars.
Creating The Bar
The first thing you have to do is enter a numeric value into the cell you’d like to format. You can either enter the value directly or use a formula. In our case I’ll just type it in.
Note how I made the column wider; you don’t necessarily have to do this, but it does help make the bar look more like a “bar” (and not just a colored cell).
Now click Conditional Formatting, select Data Bars and click More Rules.
In the New Formatting Rule dialog check the box that says Show Bar Only (so the number doesn’t appear in the cell). Under Minimum and Maximum, select Type as Number. Then, set the Value to the minimum (beginning) value of your scale and maximum (the top of your bar, the end of the process). We’ll just go for 0 and 100, but you could set this to anything that works for you.
Now let’s configure the Bar Appearance. Make sure the Fill is Solid Fill and select the color you’d like to use. When you’re done, the dialog should look similar to this:
Now click OK, and you’re done! At this point you should have a beautiful, crisp progress bar adorning your spreadsheet.
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