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Excel 2013 In Depth Book

Excel 2013 In Depth
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  • Excel 2013 In Depth
  • Written by author Bill Jelen
  • Published by Que, 2/7/2013
  • Beyond the Basics…Beneath the Surface…In Depth Excel 2013 In Depth Do more in less time! Experienced with Excel? Don't let Excel 2013 make you feel like a beginner again! This book is packed with intensely useful Excel 2013 knowledge y
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Book Categories

Authors

Introduction

Part I Mastering the New User Interface

Chapter 1 Staying Connected Using Excel 2013

Displaying Two Workbooks on Two Monitors

Understanding the Dark Side of SDI

Forcing Excel to Open in a New Instance

Signing In to Excel 2013

Introducing the Excel 2013 Start Screen

Revealing the Fatal Flaw of the Start Screen

Dismissing the Start Screen with the Escape Key

Dismissing the Start Screen Permanently

Using the Cloud for Storage and More

Relying On the Cloud

Linking Excel to Various Accounts

Using the Open and Save As Panels

Chapter 2 Introducing Flash Fill and Analysis Lens

Cleaning Data with Flash Fill

Coaching Flash Fill with a Second Example

Inserting New Characters in a Telephone Number

Using Commas Helps Flash Fill

Flash Fill Will Not Automatically Fill in Numbers

Using Formatting with Dates

Using Filter to Flash Fill a Subset of Records

Troubleshooting Flash Fill

Discovering Interesting Things in Your Data Using the Analysis Lens

Color Coding Cells in the Data

Charting Your Data

Adding Statistics to the Bottom or Right Edge of Your Data

Creating a Summary Report from Your Data

Adding Tiny Charts to Each Row

I’ve Used the Analysis Lens! Now What?

Chapter 3 Using the Excel Interface

Using the Ribbon

Using Fly-out Menus and Galleries

Rolling Through the Ribbon Tabs

Revealing More Commands Using Dialog Launchers, Task Panes, and “More” Commands

Resizing Excel Changes the Ribbon

Activating the Developer Tab

Activating Contextual Ribbon Tabs

Finding Lost Commands on the Ribbon

Shrinking the Ribbon

Using the Quick Access Toolbar

Adding Icons to the QAT

Removing Commands from the QAT

Customizing the QAT

Assigning VBA Macros to Quick Access Toolbar Buttons

Using the Full-Screen File Menu

Pressing the Esc Key to Close Backstage View

Recovering Unsaved Workbooks

Clearing the Recent Workbooks List

Getting Information About the Current Workbook

Marking a Workbook as Final to Prevent Editing

Finding Hidden Content Using the Document Inspector

Using Other Excel Interface Improvements

Adding White Space Around Icons Using Touch Mode

Previewing Paste Using the Paste Options Gallery

Accessing the Gallery After Performing a Paste Operation

Accessing the Paste Options Gallery from the Right-Click Menu

Accessing the Paste Options Gallery from the Paste Drop-Down

Using the New Sheet Icon to Add Worksheets

Navigating Through Many Worksheets Using the Controls in the Lower Left

Using the Mini Toolbar to Format Selected Text

Getting the Mini Toolbar Back

Disabling the Mini Toolbar

Expanding the Formula Bar

Zooming In and Out on a Worksheet

Using the Status Bar to Add Numbers

Switching Between Normal View, Page Break Preview, and Page Layout View Modes

Chapter 4 Customizing Excel

Performing a Simple Ribbon Modification

Adding a New Ribbon Tab

Sharing Customizations with Others

Questions About Ribbon Customization

Introducing the Excel Options Dialog

Getting Help with a Setting

New Options in Excel 2013

Using AutoRecover Options

Controlling Image Sizes

Working with Protected View for Files Originating from the Internet

Working with Trusted Document Settings

Ten Options to Consider

Five Excel Oddities

Chapter 5 Extending Excel with Excel Apps and Add-Ins

Using Apps for Office

Using Traditional Add-Ins

Charting Utilities from Jon Peltier

Loading PDF Data to Excel by Using Able2Extract

Accessing More Functions by Using MoreFunc.dll

General-Purpose Utility Suites

Utilities for Data Analysis Tasks

Chapter 6 Keyboard Shortcuts

Using New Keyboard Accelerators

Selecting Icons on the Ribbon

Selecting Options from a Gallery

Navigating Within Drop-Down Lists

Backing Up One Level Through a Menu

Dealing with Keyboard Accelerator Confusion

Selecting from Legacy Dialog Boxes

Using the Shortcut Keys

Using My Favorite Shortcut Keys

Quickly Move Between Worksheets

Jumping to the Bottom of Data with Ctrl+Arrow

Selecting the Current Region with Ctrl+*

Jumping to the Next Corner of a Selection

Pop Open the Right-Click Menu Using Shift+F10

Crossing Tasks Off Your List with Ctrl+5

Date-Stamp or Time-Stamp Using Ctrl+; or Ctrl+:

Repeating the Last Task with F4

Adding Dollar Signs to a Reference with F4

Finding the One Thing That Takes You Too Much Time

Using Excel 2003 Keyboard Accelerators

Invoking an Excel 2003 Alt Shortcut

Determining Which Commands Work in Legacy Mode

Chapter 7 The Big Grid and File Formats

Excel Grid Limits

Why Are There Only 65,536 Rows in My Excel 2013 Spreadsheet?

Other Limits in Excel 2013

Tips for Navigating the Big Grid

Using Shortcut Keys to Move Around

Using the End Key to Navigate

Using the Current Range to Navigate

Using Go To for Navigation

Understanding the File Formats

A Brief History of File Formats

Using the New Binary File Format: BIFF12

Using the New XML File Formats: XLSX and XLSM

Version Compatibility

Opening Excel 2013 Files in Excel 2002 or 2003

Minor Loss of Fidelity

Significant Loss of Functionality

Creating Excel 2013 File Formats in Excel 2003

Opening Excel 2013 Files in Excel 2007

Part II Calculating with Excel

Chapter 8 Understanding Formulas

Getting the Most from This Chapter

Introduction to Formulas

Formulas Versus Values

Entering Your First Formula

Building a Formula

The Relative Nature of Formulas

Overriding Relative Behavior: Absolute Cell References

Using Mixed References to Combine Features of Relative and Absolute References

Using the F4 Key to Simplify Dollar Sign Entry

Three Methods of Entering Formulas

Enter Formulas Using the Mouse Method

Entering Formulas Using the Arrow Key Method

Entering the Same Formula in Many Cells

Copying a Formula by Using Ctrl+Enter

Copying a Formula by Dragging the Fill Handle

Double-Click the Fill Handle to Copy a Formula

Use the Table Tool to Copy a Formula

Chapter 9 Controlling Formulas

Formula Operators

Order of Operations

Stacking Multiple Parentheses

Understanding Error Messages in Formulas

Using Formulas to Join Text

Joining Text and a Number

Copying Versus Cutting a Formula

Automatically Formatting Formula Cells

Using Date Math

Troubleshooting Formulas

Highlighting All Formula Cells

Seeing All Formulas

Editing a Single Formula to Show Direct Precedents

Using Formula Auditing Arrows

Tracing Dependents

Using the Watch Window

Evaluate a Formula in Slow Motion

Evaluating Part of a Formula

Chapter 10 Understanding Functions

Working with Functions

The Formulas Tab in Excel 2013

Finding the Function You Need

Using AutoComplete to Find Functions

Using the Insert Function Dialog to Find Functions

Getting Help with Excel Functions

Using On-Grid Tooltips

Using the Function Arguments Dialog

Using Excel Help

Using AutoSum

Potential Problems with AutoSum

Special Tricks with AutoSum

Using AutoAverage or AutoCount

Function Reference Chapters

Chapter 11 Using Everyday Functions: Math, Date and Time, and Text Functions

Examples of Math Functions

Using SUM to Add Numbers

Using AGGREGATE to Ignore Error Cells or Filtered Rows

Using COUNT or COUNTA to Count Numbers or Nonblank Cells

Using ROUND, ROUNDDOWN, ROUNDUP, INT, TRUNC, FLOOR, FLOOR.MATH, CEILING, CEILING.MATH, EVEN, ODD, or MROUND to Remove Decimals or Round Numbers

Using SUBTOTAL Instead of SUM with Multiple Levels of Totals

Using SUBTOTAL Instead of SUM to Ignore Rows Hidden by a Filter

Using RAND and RANDBETWEEN to Generate Random Numbers and Data

Using =ROMAN() to Finish Movie Credits and =ARABIC() to Convert Back to Digits

Using ABS() to Figure Out the Magnitude of ERROR

Using PI to Calculate Cake or Pizza Pricing

Using =COMBIN to Figure Out Lottery Probability

Using COMBINA to Calculate Triple-Dip Ice Cream Bowls

Using FACT to Calculate the Permutation of a Number

Using GCD and LCM to Perform Seventh Grade Math

Using MULTINOMIAL to Solve a Coin Problem

Using MOD to Find the Remainder Portion of a Division Problem

Using QUOTIENT to Isolate the Integer Portion in a Division Problem

Using PRODUCT to Multiply Numbers

Using SQRT and POWER to Calculate Square Roots and Exponents

Using SIGN to Determine the Sign of a Number

Using COUNTIF, AVERAGEIF, and SUMIF to Conditionally Count, Average, or Sum Data

Using Conditional Formulas with Multiple Conditions: SUMIFS(), AVERAGEIFS(), and COUNTIFS()

Dates and Times in Excel

Understanding Excel Date and Time Formats

Examples of Date and Time Functions

Using NOW and TODAY to Calculate the Current Date and Time or Current Date

Using YEAR, MONTH, DAY, HOUR, MINUTE, and SECOND to Break a Date/Time Apart

Using DATE to Calculate a Date from Year, Month, and Day

Using TIME to Calculate a Time

Using DATEVALUE to Convert Text Dates to Real Dates

Using TIMEVALUE to Convert Text Times to Real Times

Using WEEKDAY to Group Dates by Day of the Week

Using WEEKNUM or ISOWEEKNUM to Group Dates into Weeks

Alternative Calendar Systems and DAYS360

Using YEARFRAC, DATEDIF, or DAYS to Calculate Elapsed Time

Using EDATE to Calculate Loan or Investment Maturity Dates

Using EOMONTH to Calculate the End of the Month

Using WORKDAY or NETWORKDAYS or Their International Equivalents to Calculate Workdays

Using International Versions of WORKDAY or NETWORKDAYS

Examples of Text Functions

Joining Text with the Ampersand (&) Operator

Using LOWER, UPPER, or PROPER to Convert Text Case

Using TRIM to Remove Trailing Spaces

Using CLEAN to Remove Nonprintable Characters from Text

Using the CHAR or UNICHAR Function to Generate Any Character

Using the CODE or UNICODE Function to Learn the Character Number for Any Character

Using LEFT, MID, or RIGHT to Split Text

Using LEN to Find the Number of Characters in a Text Cell

Using SEARCH or FIND to Locate Characters in a Particular Cell

Using SUBSTITUTE and REPLACE to Replace Characters

Using REPT to Repeat Text Multiple Times

Using EXACT to Test Case

Using TEXT, DOLLAR, and FIXED to Format a Number as Text

Converting Number Punctuation Using the NUMBERVALUE Functions

Using the T and VALUE Functions

Using Functions for Non-English Character Sets

Chapter 12 Using Powerful Functions: Logical, Lookup, Web, and Database Functions

Examples of Logical Functions

Using the IF Function to Make a Decision

Using the AND Function to Check for Two or More Conditions

Using the AND Function to Compare Two Lists

Using OR or XOR to Check Whether One or More Conditions Are Met

Using the TRUE and FALSE Functions

Using the NOT Function to Simplify the Use of AND and OR

Using the IFERROR or IFNA Function to Simplify Error Checking

Examples of Information Functions

Using the IS Functions to Test for Errors

Using the ISFORMULA Function with Conditional Formatting to Mark Formula Cells

Using IS Functions to Test for Types of Values

Using the SHEETS and SHEET Functions to Dynamically Build a 3-D Reference

Using the ISREF Function to Check a Reference

Using the N Function to Add a Comment to a Formula

Using the NA Function to Force Charts to Not Plot Missing Data

Using the INFO Function to Print Information About a Computer

Using the CELL Function

Using TYPE to Determine the Type of Cell Value

Examples of Lookup and Reference Functions

Using the CHOOSE Function for Simple Lookups

Using VLOOKUP with TRUE to Find a Value Based on a Range

Using COLUMN to Assist with VLOOKUP When Filling a Wide Table

Using HLOOKUP for Horizontal Lookup Tables

Using the MATCH Function to Locate the Position of a Matching Value

Using INDEX and MATCH for a Left Lookup

Using MATCH and INDEX to Fill a Wide Table

Performing Many Lookups with LOOKUP

Using FORMULATEXT to Document a Worksheet

Using Functions to Describe the Shape of a Contiguous Reference

Using AREAS and INDEX to Describe a Range with More Than One Area

Using Numbers with OFFSET to Describe a Range

Using ADDRESS to Find the Address for Any Cell

Using INDIRECT to Build and Evaluate Cell References on the Fly

Using the HYPERLINK Function to Quickly Add Hyperlinks

Using the TRANSPOSE Function to Formulaically Turn Data

Using the RTD Function and COM Add ins to Retrieve Real-time Data

Using GETPIVOTDATA to Retrieve One Cell from a Pivot Table

Cube Functions Introduced in Excel 2007

Examples of Web Functions

Using ENCODEURL to Replace Reserved Characters

Returning XML or JSON Using the WEBSERVICE Function

Parsing XML from the WEBSERVICE Function Using the FILTERXML Function

Examples of Database Functions

Using DSUM to Conditionally Sum Records from a Database

Using the DGET Function

Chapter 13 Using Financial Functions

Examples of Common Household Loan and Investment Functions

Using RRI to Calculate the Investment Return After Many Years

Using PDURATION to Calculate How Long It Will Take Before You Are a Millionaire

Using PMT to Calculate the Monthly Payment on an Automobile Loan

Using RATE to Determine an Interest Rate

Using PV to Figure Out How Much House You Can Afford

Using NPER to Estimate How Long a Nest Egg Will Last

Using FV to Estimate the Future Value of a Regular Savings Plan

Examples of Functions for Financial Professionals

Using PPMT to Calculate the Principal Payment for Any Month

Using IPMT to Calculate the Interest Portion of a Loan Payment for Any Month

Using CUMIPMT to Calculate Total Interest Payments During a Time Frame

Using CUMPRINC to Calculate Total Principal Paid in Any Range of Periods

Using EFFECT to Calculate the Effect of Compounding Period on Interest Rates

Using NOMINAL to Convert the Effective Interest Rate to a Nominal Rate

Examples of Depreciation Functions

Using SLN to Calculate Straight-Line Depreciation

Using DB to Calculate Declining-Balance Depreciation

Using DDB to Calculate Double-Declining- Balance Depreciation

Using SYD to Calculate Sum-of-Years’- Digits Depreciation

Using VDB to Calculate Depreciation for Any Period

Functions for Investment Analysis

Using the NPV Function to Determine Net Present Value

Using IRR to Calculate the Return of a Series of Cash Flows

Using MIRR to Calculate Internal Rate of Return, Including Interest Rates

Using XNPV to Calculate the Net Present Value When the Payments Are Not Periodic

Using XIRR to Calculate a Return Rate When Cash Flow Dates Are Not Periodic

Examples of Functions for Bond Investors

Using YIELD to Calculate a Bond’s Yield

Using PRICE to Back into a Bond Price

Using RECEIVED to Calculate Total Cash Generated from a Bond Investment

Using INTRATE to Back into the Coupon Interest Rate

Using DISC to Back into the Discount Rate

Handling Bonds with an Odd Number of Days in the First or Last Period

Using PRICEMAT and YIELDMAT to Calculate Price and Yield for Zero Coupon Bonds

Using PRICEDISC and YIELDDISC to Calculate Discount Bonds

Calculating T-Bills

Using ACCRINT or ACCINTM to Calculate Accrued Interest

Using DURATION to Understand Price Volatility

Examples of Miscellaneous Financial Functions

Using DOLLARDE and DOLLARFR to Convert Between Decimals and Fractions

Using FVSCHEDULE to Calculate the Future Value for a Variable Scheduled Interest Rate

Chapter 14 Using Statistical Functions

Functions That Have Been Renamed

Using Worksheets with Legacy Function Names

Examples of Functions for Descriptive Statistics

Using MIN or MAX to Find the Smallest or Largest Numeric Value

Using LARGE to Find the Top N Values in a List of Values

Using SMALL to Sequence a List in Date Sequence

Using MEDIAN, MODE.SNGL, MODE.MULT, and AVERAGE to Find the Central Tendency of a Data Set

Using TRIMMEAN to Exclude Outliers from the Mean

Using GEOMEAN to Calculate Average Growth Rate

Using HARMEAN to Find Average Speeds

Using AVERAGEIF or AVERAGEIFS

Using RANK to Calculate the Position Within a List

Using QUARTILE.INC to Break a Data Set into Quarters

Using PERCENTILE.INC to Calculate Percentile

Using PERCENTRANK.INC to Assign a Percentile to Every Record

Using AVEDEV, DEVSQ, VAR.S, and STDEV.S to Calculate Dispersion

Examples of Functions for Regression and Forecasting

Considerations When Using Regression Analysis

Regression Function Arguments

Functions for Simple Straight-Line Regression: SLOPE and INTERCEPT

Using LINEST to Calculate Straight-Line Regression with Complete Statistics

Using FORECAST to Calculate Prediction for Any One Data Point

Using TREND to Calculate Many Future Data Points at Once

Using LOGEST to Perform Exponential Regression

Using GROWTH to Predict Many Data Points from an Exponential Regression

Exponential Regression Used to Predict Future Generations

Using PEARSON to Determine Whether a Linear Relationship Exists

Using RSQ to Determine the Strength of a Linear Relationship

Using STEYX to Calculate Standard Regression Error

Using COVARIANCE.P to Determine Whether Two Variables Vary Together

Using CORREL to Calculate Positive or Negative Correlation

Using FISHER to Perform Hypothesis Testing on Correlations

Using SKEW, SKEW.P, and KURTOSIS

Examples of Functions for Inferential Statistics

Understanding the Language of Inferential Statistics

Using BINOM.DIST to Determine Probability

Using BINOM.DIST.RANGE to Calculate the Probability of N to N Binomial Events

Using BINOM.INV to Cover Most of the Possible Binomial Events

Using NEGBINOM.DIST to Calculate Probability

Using POISSON.DIST to Predict a Number of Discrete Events Over Time

Using FREQUENCY to Categorize Continuous Data

Using NORM.DIST to Calculate the Probability in a Normal Distribution

Using NORM.INV to Calculate the Value for a Certain Probability

Functions for the Standard Normal Distribution

Using PHI to Plot a Standard Normal Curve

Using NORM.S.INV to Calculate a z Score for a Given Probability

Using STANDARDIZE to Calculate the Distance from the Mean

Using Student’s t-Distribution for Small Sample Sizes

Using CHISQ.TEST to Perform Goodness-of-Fit Testing

The Sum of Squares Functions

Testing Probability on Logarithmic Distributions

Using GAMMA.DIST and GAMMA.INV to Analyze Queuing Times

Calculating Probability of Beta Distributions

Using F.TEST to Measure Differences in Variability

Other Distributions: Exponential, Hypergeometric, and Weibull

Using Z.TEST, CONFIDENCE.NORM, and CONFIDENCE.T to Calculate Confidence Intervals

Using Z.TEST to Accept or Reject an Hypothesis

Using PERMUT to Calculate the Number of Possible Arrangements

Using PERMUTATIONA to Calculate the Number of Possible Arrangements When Repeats Are Allowed

Using the Analysis ToolPak to Perform Statistical Analysis

Installing the Analysis ToolPak in Excel 2013

Generating Random Numbers Based on Various Distributions

Generating a Histogram

Generating Descriptive Statistics of a Population

Ranking Results

Using Regression to Predict Future Results

Using a Moving Average to Forecast Sales

Using Exponential Smoothing to Forecast Sales

Using Correlation or Covariance to Calculate the Relationship Between Many Variables

Using Sampling to Create Random Samples

Using ANOVA to Perform Analysis of Variance Testing

Using the F-Test to Measure Variability Between Methods

Performing a z-Test to Determine Whether Two Samples Have Equal Means

Performing Student’s t-Testing to Test Population Means

Using Functions Versus the Analysis ToolPak Tools

Chapter 15 Using Trig, Matrix, and Engineering Functions

A Brief Review of Trigonometry Basics

Radians Versus Degrees

Pythagoras and Right Triangles

One Side + One Angle = Trigonometry

Using TAN to Find the Height of a Tall Building from the Ground

Using SIN to Find the Height of a Kite in a Tree

Using COS to Figure Out a Ladder’s Length

Using the “Arc” Functions to Find the Measure of an Angle

Using ATAN2 to Calculate Angles in a Circle

Emulating Gravity Using Hyperbolic Trigonometry Functions

Examples of Logarithm Functions

Common Logarithms on a Base-10 Scale

Using LOG to Calculate Logarithms for Any Base

Working with Imaginary Numbers

Using COMPLEX to Convert a and b into a Complex Number

Using IMREAL and IMAGINARY to Break Apart Complex Numbers

Using IMSUM to Add Complex Numbers

Using IMSUB, IMPRODUCT, and IMDIV to Perform Basic Math on Complex Numbers

Using IMABS to Find the Distance from the Origin to a Complex Number

Using IMARGUMENT to Calculate the Angle to a Complex Number

Using IMCONJUGATE to Reverse the Sign of an Imaginary Component

Calculating Powers, Logarithms, and Trigonometry Functions with Complex Numbers

Solving Simultaneous Linear Equations with Matrix Functions

Using MDETERM to Determine Whether a Simultaneous Equation Has a Solution

Using SERIESSUM to Approximate a Function with a Power Series

Using SQRTPI to Find the Square Root of a Number Multiplied by p

Using SUMPRODUCT to Sum Based on Multiple Conditions

Examples of Engineering Functions

Using CONVERT to Convert English to Metric

Performing Bitwise Operations for Electrical Engineering

Converting to Other Number Systems

Converting from Other Number Systems to Decimal

Converting from Binary to Hexadecimal

Converting Using the Legacy Functions

Explaining the Two’s Complement for Negative Numbers

Using DELTA or GESTEP to Filter a Set of Values

Using ERF and ERFC to Calculate the Error Function and Its Complement

Calculating the BESSEL Functions

Using the Analysis Toolpack to Perform Fast Fourier Transforms (FFTs)

Chapter 16 Connecting Worksheets, Workbooks, and External Data

Connecting Two Worksheets

Creating Links Using Paste Options Menu

Creating Links Using the Right-Drag Menu

Building a Link by Using the Mouse

Links to External Workbooks Default to Absolute References

Building a Formula by Typing

Creating Links to Unsaved Workbooks

Using the Links Tab on the Trust Center

Opening Workbooks with Links to Closed Workbooks

Dealing with Missing Linked Workbooks

Preventing the Update Links Dialog from Appearing

Connecting to Data on a Web Page

Setting Up a Connection to a Web Page

Managing Properties for Web Queries

Setting Up a Connection to a Text File

Setting Up a Connection to an Access Database

Setting Up SQL Server, XML, OLE DB, and ODBC Connections

Connecting Using Microsoft Query

Managing Connections

Chapter 17 Using Super Formulas in Excel

Using 3D Formulas to Spear Through Many Worksheets

Referring to the Previous Worksheet

Combining Multiple Formulas into One Formula

Calculating a Cell Reference in the Formula by Using the INDIRECT Function

Using OFFSET to Refer to a Range That Dynamically Resizes

Assigning a Formula to a Name

Turning a Range of Formulas on Its Side

Replacing Multiple Formulas with One Array Formula

Setting Up an Array Formula

Understanding an Array Formula

Coercing a Range of Dates Using an Array Formula

Chapter 18 Using Names in Excel

Advantages of Using Names

Naming a Cell by Using the Name Dialog

Using the Name Box for Quick Navigation

Avoiding Problems by Using Worksheet- Level Scope

Defining a Worksheet-Level Name

Referring to Worksheet-Level Names

Understanding Phantom Names in Excel 2010 and Earlier

Using Named Ranges to Simplify Formulas

Retroactively Applying Names to Formulas

Using Names to Refer to Ranges

Dealing with Invalid Legacy Naming

Adding Many Names at Once from Existing Labels and Headings

Using Intersection to Do a Two-Way Lookup

Using Implicit Intersection

Managing Names

Filtering the Name Manager Dialog

Using a Name to Simplify an Absolute Reference

Using a Name to Hold a Value

Assigning a Formula to a Name

Using Basic Named Formulas

Using Dynamic Named Formulas

Using a Named Formula to Point to the Cell Above

Chapter 19 Fabulous Table Intelligence

Defining Suitable Data for Excel Tables

Defining a Table

Keeping Headers in View

Freezing Worksheet Panes

Clearing Freeze Panes

Using the Old Version of Freeze Panes for Absolute Control

Adding a Total Row to a Table

Toggling Totals

Expanding a Table

Adding Rows to a Table Automatically

Manually Resizing a Table

Adding New Columns to a Table

Adding New Formulas to Tables

Stopping the Automatic Copying of Formulas

Formatting the Results of a New Formula

Selecting Only the Data in the Column

Selecting by Right-Clicking

Selecting by Using Shortcuts

Selecting by Using the Arrow Mouse Pointers

Using Table Data for Charts to Ens


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