Sunday, December 15, 2013

How to Password Protect Excel 2003


1.
In order to protect your Microsoft excel worksheet go to TOOLs menu select PROTECTION. From there you should see a menu like the picture on your left.
2.
From there you will be given a series of options that will allow you to protect a Microsoft excel worksheet, workbook or a range on your specific file. As you can see from the image on your left you can get very granular with this.
3. Make your appropriate adjustments and then click OK. You should be prompted to retype the password. Once that is done make sure you save your changes and close the document and reopen it to see if your password took.
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Saturday, December 14, 2013

How to Create a Box Plot in Microsoft Excel 2007


Set Up the Plot Data
1. Create a table with a column for each data set. In the table rows, add formulas for the calculations of (in order) the minimum, first quartile, median, third quartile and maximum for each data set using the Excel functions MIN, MAX, MEDIAN and QUARTILE (or PERCENTILE). This is the 'summary table.'
2. Create a second table with the same rows and columns as above. This table will contain the values used for the plot. This is the 'plot data table.'
3. Add a formula for each data set's maximum value in the plot data table that is the maximum minus the third quartile values from the summary table.
4. Add a formula for each data set's third quartile value in the plot data table that is the third quartile minus the median values from the summary table.
5. Add a formula for each data set's median value in the plot data table that is the median minus the first quartile values from the summary table.
6. Add a formula for each data set's first quartile value in the plot data table copying the first quartile value from the summary table.
7. Add a formula for each data set's minimum value in the data table table that is the first quartile minus the minimum values from the summary table.
Create the Plot
8. Select the range containing the third quartile, median and first quartile of all the data sets in the plot data table.
9. Open the Insert ribbon. Click 'Column' on the charts. Select 'Stacked Column' from the '2-D Column' type charts.
10. Click 'Select Data' under 'Design' on the 'Chart Tools' section of the ribbon. Modify the 'Series' order so 'Series 3' is the bottom segment on the chart and 'Series 1' is the top segment on the chart.
11. Click on the bottom segment of one of the columns in the chart. Select 'Layout' under 'Chart Tools' on the ribbon. Click 'Error Bars' and select 'More Error Bars Options.' The 'Format Error Bars' window appears.
12. Select 'Minus' for the 'Direction.' Select 'Custom' for the 'Error Amount.' Click 'Specify Value' and select the range for all the minimum values in the plot data table for the 'Negative Error Value' in the 'Custom Error Bars' window. Click 'OK' to exit this window and 'Close' on the next window to return to the chart.
13. Click on the top segment of one of the columns in the chart. Go to the 'Format Error Bars' window as above. Choose 'Plus' for the 'Direction' and use the maximum values in the plot data table for the 'Positive Error Value' range for the 'Custom Error Amount.'
14. Right-click on the bottom segment of one of the columns on the chart and select 'Format Data Series.' Set the 'Fill' to 'No fill.' Set the 'Border Color' to 'No line.' Close the window.
15. Delete the chart legend. Add polish by formatting the chart colors, adding a title and other finishing touches.
16. Select the rows containing the plot data table. Under 'Home' on the ribbon, click 'Format' and select 'Hide Rows' under the 'Hide Unhide' sub-menu.
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How to Do Percentages With Excel 2003


1. Open Excel 2003, and open a workbook that contains a column with amounts and another column with totals. Click 'File' on the menu bar, and click 'Open.' Browse your files, and locate the workbook. Click the workbook and select the 'Open' button. The workbook opens.
2. Click in the next available column in your workbook. Type '=.' Click in the first cell that contains the first amount. Type '/.' Click in the first cell that contains the first total, and press the 'Enter' key. A value is generated.
3. Highlight the column containing this new formula. Click the '%' symbol on the standard toolbar. Your value is transformed into a percentage.
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How to Maximize a Sheet in Excel 2007


1. Open an Excel worksheet by clicking on the round 'Office' button in the top left-hand corner of Excel 2007. Select 'Open' from the drop-down menu on the left. Choose the file name of the Excel document that you wish to open.
2. Click on the 'maximize' button in your Excel work window. You'll find it just to the left of the 'close' button in the top right corner. An 'X' identifies the close button, and a square, the maximize button. The maximize function changes your worksheet to maximum size within your open Excel document.
3. Click on the 'restore down' button to make your worksheet smaller. The restore down function changes your worksheet to smaller size within your open Excel document. You'll find the restore down button in the same location as the maximize button. The two buttons function as a toggle: When you have maximized the sheet, the button represents restore down.
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Friday, December 13, 2013

How to Sort and Filter in Microsoft Excel


1. Open Microsoft Excel and go to 'File' and 'Open' to open the document containing data you want to sort and filter. Highlight the document and click 'Open.' The document will open in a new window.
2. Highlight the data you want to sort. You may select an entire worksheet, a column, multiple columns or specific data within a column.
3. Complete a simple sort by selecting the 'Home' tab from the ribbon and from the 'Editing' group selecting 'Sort and Filter.'
4. Click the appropriate option that matches your preferred sort. For example, if your data is a group of dates, click 'Sort Oldest to Newest' or 'Sort Newest to Oldest.' If your data is text, select either 'Sort A to Z' or 'Sort Z to A.' If your data consists of numbers, select 'Sort Smallest to Largest' or 'Sort Largest to Smallest.' The sort will occur upon clicking this command.
5. Complete an advanced custom sort by selecting 'Editing', 'Sort and Filter' and 'Custom Sort.' Select the appropriate options for your sort from options that include columns, value or order---with or without the column headers. You may also sort by multiple levels. For example, your data may be sorted alphabetically at the first level and by date at the second level.
6. Filter your data by selecting 'Home,' the 'Editing' group and 'Filter.' A drop-down arrow appears next to the first cell of data. Click the drop-down and uncheck any data that you want to filter out. You may perform a sort based on the data that remains.
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How to Use Absolute References in Microsoft Excel


1. Enter a value into the cell you want to keep constant.
2. Select another cell in the Excel spreadsheet for the formula that will use the absolute reference.
3. Enter the formula. Use the dollar sign ($) in front of the row reference to keep to keep the row absolute or in front column reference to keep it absolute. For instance, '$C$21' is an absolute reference for cell 'C21,' while 'C$21' an absolute reference to row '21' but but a relative reference column 'C.'
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Thursday, December 12, 2013

How to Convert Word to Excel 2007


1. Launch Microsoft Word and open the document that you want to convert to Excel. Click once on the Microsoft Office button and select the 'Open' option. Locate the folder in which the document is saved in the 'Look in' section of the 'Navigation Pane.' Double click on the file name to open it. If you do not have either program, a free trial may be downloaded from the Microsoft site.
2. Save the Word document as a text (TXT) file. Click once on the Microsoft Office button and select the 'Save As' option. Select a folder in which to save the text file using the 'Save in' menu. Use the 'Save as type' menu to select the 'Text (TXT)' option. Type a name for the text file in the 'File name' field and click once on the 'Save' button.
3. Launch Microsoft Excel 2007 and import the text file. Click once on the 'Data' tab and locate the 'Get External Data' section. Click once on the 'From Text' option. Use the 'Look in' menu to locate the folder in which the text file is saved. Double click on the file name to open it.
4. Use the 'Text Import Wizard' to convert the information from the Word document to Excel. Select the 'Delimited text files (.txt)' option. Click once on the 'Next' button. Depending on the type of data that was in the Word document, select the appropriate separator, for example commas or tabs, to separate the text into Excel fields. Click once on the 'Finish' button to complete the process of converting the Word document to Excel 2007. Remember to save the Excel 2007 file by clicking once on the Microsoft Office button and once on the 'Save As' option.
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How to Unlock Grayed Out Menus in Excel 2007


1. Position your cursor so that it is on one of the sheet tabs at the bottom of the screen. Make sure the sheet tab is highlighted.
2. Right-click the sheet tab. Choose 'Ungroup Sheets' from the drop-down menu.
3. Click one of the menus. All of the options should now be visible. If the options are still grayed out, right-click the sheet tab again and choose 'Ungroup Sheets.'
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How to Remove a Contribute Toolbar From Excel 2003


1. Open Excel. Customizations to the toolbar interface are always accomplished within the program. However, it does not matter what file is opened within Excel, or if the program window is open without any files loaded.
2. Locate the 'Contribute' toolbar. It is important to see the toolbar when it is active so you can easily verify if the removal process was successful. As there are many toolbars, removing a single toolbar is not always obvious unless you are aware of its precise location in the program window.
3. Click the 'View' menu. Select the 'Toolbars' submenu. If the 'Toolbars' submenu is not listed, the menu is set to automatically collapse and show only the most frequently used features. Click the double arrow at the bottom of the 'View' menu to fully expand the list of items and select the 'Toolbars' submenu.
4. Locate the 'Contribute' item in the 'Toolbars' submenu. If the 'Contribute' toolbar is turned on, it will show a check mark next to its listing. Click on the 'Contribute' item in the list and the check mark will disappear. The toolbar is no longer active and it is removed from the Excel 2003 screen.
5. Right-click on any toolbar area or button in the Excel 2003 window to display the toolbars context menu as an alternative to using the 'View' menu. Remove the 'Contribute' toolbar in the same fashion using this pop-up menu.
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How to Open WB3 Files in Excel 2003


1. Launch 'Excel.'
2. Go to 'File.' Select 'Open,' choose 'Quattro Pro/DOS' from the 'Files of Type' drop-down menu. Navigate to the folder where your WB3 file is located, and double-click to select the file.
3. Go to 'File,' and select 'Save As.' Choose 'Excel 97-2003 Workbook (*.xls)' from the 'Save as Type' options. Click 'Save.'
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How to Create Mailing Labels From an Excel Database


1. Open Microsoft Word. Click the 'Mailings' tab and click 'Start Mail Merge.' Select 'Labels.' The 'Label Options' dialog box will open, where you can set up the labels.
2. Select the type of printer you are going to use under 'Printer Information.' Click the 'Label Vendors' list and select the manufacturer of your label sheets. Select the product number listed on your label sheet packaging from the 'Product Number' list. Click 'OK.' The sheet of labels is set up as a table in your document.
3. Click the 'Mailings' tab, then 'Select Recipients' in the 'Start Mail Merge' group. Click 'Use Existing List.' In the dialog box, browse through your computer files to select the Excel database file containing your address list. Double click the file.
4. Select particular recipients if you don't want to use your whole Excel list. To do so, click 'Edit Recipient List' in the 'Start Mail Merge' group on the 'Mailings' tab. Choose individual records by checking the box next to each record you want and unchecking the ones you don't want to use.
5. Set up the mail-merge fields, which will match each address component from your list to a placeholder on your label document. Click 'Match Fields' in the 'Write Insert Fields' group on the 'Mailings' tab. The dialog box will open, showing a list of address elements on the left side and corresponding column headings from your address list on the right side. Click each drop-down menu and select the correct column heading you want to use for each address element. Only select the address elements you want to use in your labels.
6. Click the first label on your Word document. Add any content, such as text, picture or logo, that you want to appear on each label. To insert an image, click the 'Insert' tab, then 'Picture' in the 'Illustrations' group. Select an image file from your computer, then click 'Insert.'
7. Insert the mail-merge fields, which serve as placeholders until you merge the labels with your address list. Click where you want to insert the address on the first label. Click 'Address Block' in the 'Write Insert Fields' group on the 'Mailings' tab. Select the address elements you want to insert and how you want them formatted. Click 'OK' to insert the address block.
8. Click 'Update Labels' in the 'Write Insert Fields' group to duplicate the data from the first label onto all the other labels.
9. Preview the merge results before completing the labels. Click 'Preview Results' on the 'Mailings' tab. If you're satisfied with them and are ready to print, click 'Finish Merge' in the 'Finish' group on the 'Mailings' tab. Click 'Print Documents.' Specify whether you want to print the whole set of labels or just a portion of them.
10. Connect your printer to the computer and feed it with the labels sheets. Click 'Print' and wait while your labels print out.
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Wednesday, December 11, 2013

How to Set Up Formulas in Excel 2007


1. Click the cell where you want to display the results.
2. Press '=' on your keyboard to start a formula.
3. Add a parenthesis and the name of the first cell you want to include in your formula. For example, your formula to this point should look something like this: =(A1
4. Add the operator -- ' ,' '-,' '*' or '/' -- you want this formula to perform. For example, =(A1
5. Type the location of the next cell for your formula and repeat Steps 3 and 4 -- minus the parenthesis -- until you have listed all the cells you want to include in your formula. For example, =(A1 A2 B1 B2 C1 C2
6. Add a closing parenthesis and press 'Enter.' Your results should appear.
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How to Change Appearance in Excel 2007


1. Choose a document theme to unite all of your Office 2007 programs with the same look. A document theme shares the same colors, fonts, lines, fill effects and other style choices. Select a document theme from the available choices or create a new document theme by going to Page Layout and selecting 'Themes.' Click on a document theme from 'Built-in' or 'Custom.' When you create a custom theme, save it under a new name.
2. Click Page Layout View to adjust margins or add headers and footers. This feature is similar to the Print Layout view in Word.
3. Use the different style choices to change the look of tables, charts and diagrams. Start with the quick styles (pre-defined styles) and customize to your liking.
4. Change chart and table Layout options to introduce changes that include moving items around. Charts and tables also have different styles to select. Go to the Design Tab or Chart or Table Styles, and click 'More.'
5. Alter your color scheme with a click of the Microsoft Office button. Click 'Excel options,' and then 'Popular.' Choose from the large number of color schemes. Change tab color by right clicking the worksheet tab. Aim at Tab Color, and choose your color.
6. Add formatting to charts not only changes the appearance, but also emphasizes important data. Try borders, fonts, bubbles or 3-D effects. If you really want an eye-catching look, try the 'Exploding Pie' or 'Doughnut Slice.' Pull up the Format dialog box to make changes. You can also right click chart items to format.
7. Fill charts not only with color, but also texture and pictures with the 'Fill Effects' command.
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How to Recover an Excel File That Was Saved Over


Using AutoRecover
1. Click 'Start' and then 'Search.'
2. Select 'All Files and Folders' when asked what you want to search for.
3. Type in '*.xls' (without the quotation marks) under 'All or Part of the File Name.'
4. Click on the arrow next to 'More advanced options' and make sure that the file type reads 'All Files and Folders.'
5. Click the boxes next to 'Search System Folders' and 'Search Hidden Files.'
6. Click 'Search.'
7. Look for an earlier version of your file (it should have a similar name). When it appears, open it to see if it is the version you want.
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How to Freeze Rows Columns


1. Place the cursor in the cell directly below the row you want to remain visible (freeze) and directly to the right of the column you want to remain visible (freeze). For example, if you want Row 1 and Columns A through C to remain visible (freeze), place the cursor in cell D2.
2. Click on the 'Window' menu.
3. Select 'Freeze Panes.'
4. Move the cursor through the spreadsheet and notice that Row 1 and Columns A through C are frozen. In other words, they always remain visible while the rest of the data move.
5. Click on the 'Window' menu and select 'Unfreeze Panes' to remove the frozen rows and columns.
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Thursday, November 28, 2013

How to Make a Chart in the Same Sheet in VBA


1. Open Excel 2010 and show the Developer tab if it isn't already showing. Click on 'File' and then 'Options.' Click on 'Customize Ribbon' on the Categories pane. Select 'Developer' from the list of main tabs and then click on 'OK.'
2. Click on the 'Developer' tab that now should be showing in the Ribbon. Click on 'Visual Basic' to open the Visual Basic editor.
3. Double-click on the worksheet in which you want to embed the chart from the Project pain. All of the worksheets that are currently in your project is listed in the pane. The code for the worksheet will open in the Code window. If you haven't already added code to the worksheet the Code window will be blank.
4. Click on 'Insert' and then 'Procedure.' Type in a name for the procedure in the name window, leave all the other options the same and then click on 'OK.' For the example in this article, name the procedure 'embedChart.'
5. Add the code that will embed a chart into the worksheet. Click between the 'Public Sub...' and 'End Sub' declarations that are now in the Code window. You will add the code for the procedure in between the two declarations. Microsoft has developed the code that will create a chart and embed it in the current spreadsheet. Copy this code into your procedure or write your own.'Sub embedChart()Dim chtNew As ChartSet chtNew = Charts.AddSet chtNew= chtNew.Location(Where:=xlLocationAsObject, Name:='Sheet1')With chtNew.ChartType = xl3DPie'Set the data range source for the chart..SetSourceData Source:=Sheets('Sheet1').Range('A1:H2'), PlotBy:= _xlRows.HasTitle = True.ChartTitle.Text = 'My Pie Chart'End WithEnd Sub'
6. Click 'Save' on the Visual Basic editor's toolbar and close. Go to the worksheet that you embedded the chart in and check to see that it is showing.
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How to Capitalize Everything in a Row in Microsoft Excel 2003


Capitalizing a Row of Cells
1. Start Microsoft Excel 2003, and open your spreadsheet.
2. Click the row number, not the cell, of the row immediately beneath the one you want to capitalize.
3. Right-click and select 'Insert' to insert an empty new row.
4. Click the cell in the new row that is directly beneath the left-most cell of the row you want to capitalize.
5. Type '=UPPER(name of cell immediately above the one you are typing in)'. Press 'Enter.'
6. Click the cell you just typed in to select it, and then hold the cursor in the lower-right corner of the cell until a black plus sign appears.
7. Hold the left mouse button down, and drag the cursor to the right, highlighting the whole row you want to capitalize.
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How to Add Buttons to an Excel Spreadsheet


1. Access the Button tool. In Excel 2003 and earlier versions, do this by clicking 'View,' 'Toolbars,' 'Forms' and then clicking the Button tool on the Forms toolbar. In Excel 2007 and later, select the 'Developer' tab, then click 'Insert' and select the Button tool.
2. Click where you want the top-left corner of your button to be, and drag to create a rectangular outline. Let go and your button will appear.
3. Right-click the button and click 'Assign Macro.' This will bring up a dialog box listing all of Excel's saved macros. (The box may appear as soon as you've created the button, without the need for the 'Assign Macro' menu selection.) Click on the macro you want and click 'OK.'
4. Right-click the button again. You can now click within the text on the button to change it as you would with any MS Office text. Give the button whatever name you want. You can also right-click on the button's outline and click 'Format Control' to change the font of the button's name.
5. Click the button to run the assigned macro.
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How to Use Data Analysis for Random Number Generation in Excel


Activate the Data Analysis Tool Pack
1. Launch Excel from the 'Start' menu or shortcut icon.
2. Click on the Microsoft Office orb to open the menu.
3. Click the 'Excel Options' option at the bottom.
4. Click 'Add-Ins' in the left pane.
5. Verify that the 'Manage' field at the bottom is set to 'Excel Add-Ins' and click the 'Go' button.
6. Click the check box beside 'Analysis ToolPak' and click 'OK' to install the add-in.
Random Number Generation
7. Click the 'Data' tab and select the 'Data Analysis Tools' icon.
8. Select 'Random Number Generation' from the list and click 'OK.'
9. Enter the number of variables you wish to use for your random number output. This determines the number of columns used to display your output.
10. Enter the number of random numbers you wish to generate. This determines the number of rows used to display the output.
11. Select the distribution type to use in the random number generation. The choices are Uniform, Normal, Bernouli, Binomial, Poisson, Patterned and Discrete. Each one is used under a different circumstance depending on the type of data you wish to analyze or produce. For example, Uniform generates a set of random numbers within the range you specify while Normal is used to generate random numbers with a certain mean and standard deviation.
12. Enter the parameters for your chosen distribution type. For example, a Uniform distribution requires you to enter the upper an lower limits of a range of numbers.
13. Enter the cell you want to use as the upper-left point in your output table in the Output Range field.
14. Click 'OK' to generate a random number table based on your selections.
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Wednesday, November 27, 2013

How to Convert Office 2007 to Excel 2003


1. Open your Web browser, then go to the Microsoft Office Compatibility Pack download page.
2. Click the blue 'Download' button at the top of the page.
3. Click 'Save' in the download confirmation pop-up box. This downloads the installation file to your computer. Note the save location to help you find the file when you come to install it. The default save location is usually the 'Downloads' library folder.
4. Wait for the file to download. Windows displays a progress bar during the download process.
5. Find the downloaded installation file -- named 'FileFormatConverters' -- on your computer.
6. Double-click the file to install the program. Click 'Yes' if the installation wizard prompts you to restart the computer.
7. Launch Microsoft Excel 2003. Click 'File,' then click 'Open' to open the Excel 2007 file that you want to view or edit. Excel will now convert the new spreadsheet or workbook into a format compatible with the older software version.
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How to Scroll on Microsoft Excel


Turning on Scroll Bars in Excel 2010
1. Open Microsoft Excel 2010.
2. Select 'Open' from the 'File' menu.
3. Navigate to and double-click the spreadsheet in which you want to scroll.
4. Click on 'File' again, then select 'Options.' Click 'Advanced.'
5. Locate 'Display options for this workbook' in the right column. Check the boxes next to 'Show horizontal scroll bar' and 'Show vertical scroll bar.' Click 'OK.'
Turning on Scroll Bars in Excel 2007
6. Open Microsoft Excel 2007.
7. Click on the Microsoft Office button in the upper-left corner of Excel. Click 'Open.'
8. Navigate to and double-click the file in which you want to scroll.
9. Click the Microsoft Office button again, then select 'Excel Options.' Click 'Advanced' in the left column.
10. Locate 'Display options for this workbook' in the right column. Check the boxes next to 'Show horizontal scroll bar' and 'Show vertical scroll bar.' Click 'OK.'
Scrolling through Excel
11. Click on the horizontal scroll bar to scroll to the right and left. Click on the vertical scroll bar to scroll up and down. Hold down the mouse button at the screen edge for at least 10 seconds to increase the scroll speed. Hold down the 'Shift' button while scrolling to scroll long distances.
12. Press the 'Scroll Lock' button on the keyboard to scroll through columns and rows as opposed to moving to an adjacent cell. Press the up and down arrows on the keyboard to scroll vertically or the left and right buttons to scroll horizontally. Press 'Ctrl' while pressing an arrow button to scroll through large distances in the worksheet. Press 'Page Up' or 'Page Down' to scroll down a window.
13. Rotate your mouse wheel up or down to scroll. Click the wheel and move the mouse in the direction in which you wish to scroll to accelerate the scroll speed. Reclick the mouse to stop scrolling.
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Tuesday, November 26, 2013

How to Convert Corel Quattro Pro to Microsoft Excel


1. Click 'File,' then 'Open' in Microsoft Excel 2003 or earlier. In Microsoft Excel 2007, click the 'Office' button, then 'Open.' The 'Open' dialog box appears.
2. Locate the Corel Quattro Pro file. Click it once and click 'Open' or double-click the file to open it.
3. Save the file as Microsoft Excel spreadsheet. Click on 'File,' then 'Save as' in Excel 2003 or earlier version. In Excel 2007, click the 'Office' button, then 'Save as.' Choose a file location. Leave the name the same or rename the file by typing in the new name in the 'Filename' box. Click 'Save.'
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How to Merge Center in Excel


1. Open Outlook by double-clicking on an Excel file. Alternatively, click 'Start,' then 'All Programs,' then 'Microsoft Office' then select 'Microsoft Excel' from the list.
2. Click on the 'Home' tab on the menu screen.
3. Select the cells you want to merge and center by left clicking on a cell and dragging the mouse until all the desired cells are highlighted. You can tell they are selected by the black line surrounding the cells.
4. Click on 'Merge Center' located in the middle of the 'Home' tab menu (it will be under the 'Wrap Text' option).
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How to Make Negative Numbers Red in Excel


1. Highlight the cells containing your data. Note that Excel allows you to apply special formatting for different types of numerical data, such as percentages and currency values. If your data contains numbers formatted as different types, for example, both percentages and currencies, make sure the cells you highlight contain numbers formatted as the same type. If all your numbers are formatted the same way, you can highlight all the cells on a worksheet with one command: press and hold the 'Ctrl' key on Windows (or the 'Command' key on a Mac), and then press the 'A' key.
2. Right-click a highlighted cell. In the menu that pops-up, click 'Format Cells' to open a formatting window.
3. Select the 'Number' tab in the 'Format Cells' window, then select 'Number' in the category box. If you have applied a specific format to your cells, such as Currency, Accounting, Percentage, Fraction, Scientific or Special, select that category instead of 'Number.'
4. Click on the red numbers in the 'Negative Numbers' box, then click 'OK.' All negative numbers in your selected cells will now display in red.
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How to Create a Fillable Order Form


Microsoft Excel 2010
1. Open Excel 2010 and select the 'File' tab. Click 'New' and type 'order form' in the search box. Hit the 'Enter' key on your keyboard. Excel displays the available templates.
2. Preview a template by clicking on one. The preview is displayed in the right task pane. Download the template by clicking it and selecting the 'Download' button. The template downloads to your computer.
3. Add your products, sales staff and logo to the form template. Add your name, address and date. Save your template by clicking the 'Save' icon on the Quick Access Toolbar.
Google Documents
4. Access the Google Documents website. Type 'Order Form' and press 'Enter.' Review the available templates that appear.
5. Preview the templates by clicking the 'Preview' button. Download the template by clicking the 'Use This Template' button.
6. Edit the newly downloaded template by adding your customized information. This includes your name, address, products, sales staff, logo and date.
OpenOffice Calc
7. Access the OpenOffice website. Type 'Order Form' and press 'Enter.' Review the available templates that appear.
8. Download an order template by clicking the 'Use This' button. The template downloads to your computer.
9. Double-click the template file to open it in OpenOffice Calc. Edit the newly downloaded template by adding your customized information. This includes your name, address, products, sales staff, logo, and date.
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How to Take the Label 'Sum of' Out of a Pivot Table


1. Click on a cell in the PivotTable in the column from which you want to remove 'Sum of.'
2. Click the 'Options' tab on the toolbar, then click the 'Field Settings' button under the 'Active Field' area of the toolbar. A small window will pop up.
3. Place your cursor in the 'Custom Name' field and erase the 'Sum of' from the name.
4. Move your cursor to the end of what is left and add a space to the name. This is because once you remove the 'Sum of,' the remaining name is that same as a recognized field in the field list, and if you try to make a second field, Excel will give you an error. The extra space lets Excel differentiate between the two names, but they will look the same to anyone who views your PivotTable.
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Monday, November 25, 2013

How to Use Excel's VARP Function


1. Learn the syntax of VARP. It is VARP(number1,number2,...) where number1, number2,... are up to 30 arguments which evaluate to numbers and comprise a complete population. VARP requires at least one argument.
2. Use arrays, names or references that contain numbers as arguments for VARP, in addition to pure numbers. Only numbers in an array or reference will be counted. Empty cells, error values, logical values or text in an array or reference will be ignored.
3. Enter logical values and text that represents numbers directly into the argument list. Error values or text that does not evaluate to a number will cause an error.
4. Ensure VARP is the correct function to use. VAR should be used instead of VARP if the data represents only a population sample. Use the VARPA function instead if you wish to include a reference that contains logical values or numbers represented by text in the calculation.
5. Calculate the VARP as the sum of (number - AVERAGE(number1,number2,...))^2/n where number is each value in the population and n is the number of values in the population. For A2 = 3.5, A3 = 5, A4 = 7.23 and A5 = 2.99, VARP(A2,A3,A4,A5) would return 2.71335.
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Sunday, November 24, 2013

How to Extract Tables From Multiple Word Documents Import Them to Excel


1. Use Windows Explorer to copy a Word file containing at least one table to the folder 'C:\.' Rename the file as 'table.docx.' You'll write an introductory program that will read a table cell from this file.
2. Click the 'Developer' tab, then click the 'Visual Basic' button to enter the Visual Basic programming environment. Paste the following program into VB code window. This program creates a link to Word, which allows excel to use Word's virtual objects just as though the program were running inside a Word document. This process is called 'Automation.'Public Sub LoadWordTablebak()Dim pgmWord As Word.ApplicationSet pgmWord = CreateObject('Word.Application')pgmWord.Documents.Open ('c:\table.docx')MsgBox pgmWord.ActiveDocument.Tables(1).Cell(1, 1)pgmWord.ActiveDocument.ClosepgmWord.QuitEnd Sub
3. Click the 'Tools' menu, then click the 'References' command. Scroll through the window that appears to locate the 'Microsoft Word' item, then click the checkbox for that item. This action lets Excel access the visual objects in a Word document.
4. Click any statement in the program, then click the 'Run' menu's 'Run' command. The program will display a message box showing the contents of a table cell in a Word document. You'll now expand the program to load in a complete table from any Word document.
5. Paste the following revised program below the 'End Sub' statement of the original program. This program prompts the user for the filename of a Word document. The user must also type in the number of a table within the document. The program uses the automation method of the first program to load copy the specified table cell by cell into an Excel spreadsheet.Public Sub LoadWordTable2()Dim docname As StringDim TableId As IntegerDim c, r, startRow As IntegerDim curCellDim pgmWord As Word.ApplicationSet curCell = ActiveCellSet pgmWord = CreateObject('Word.Application')docname = InputBox('Enter Word document name')docname = InputBox('Enter Word document name')While (docname
'')TableId = InputBox('Enter table number')pgmWord.Documents.Open ('c:\table.docx')With pgmWord.ActiveDocument.Tables(TableId)startRow = ActiveCell.RowFor c = 1 To .Columns.CountFor r = 1 To .Rows.CountcurCell.Value = .Cell(r, c)'Move to next rowSet curCell = curCell.Offset(1, 0)Next r'Move to next columnSet curCell = Cells(startRow, curCell.Column 1)Next cEnd WithpgmWord.ActiveDocument.Closedocname = InputBox('Enter Word document name')WendpgmWord.QuitEnd Sub
6. Click the 'Excel' application icon in the Windows taskbar to return to Excel, then click the 'Macros' button of the 'Developer' tab. Double-click the 'LoadWordTable' macro to run that macro.
7. Type the name of a Word document containing a table when the prompt to do so appears. Type the number of the table you want when the prompt for that table appears. For example, if you want the second table in the document, type '2.' Excel will load the table into the current spreadsheet.
8. Continue loading Word tables with the program as needed. Press 'Enter' at the 'document name' prompt to terminate the program.
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How to Create a Form in Microsoft Excel 2007


1. Launch Excel from the start menu or from the desktop. Click the small drop-down arrow at the very top of the screen, to the right of the Save, Undo, and Re-do buttons. In the menu that appears, choose 'More commands.' The Excel Options screen should appear.
2. In Excel Options, click the drop-down at the top of the left-hand list of commands, labeled 'Choose commands from.' In the list that drops down, choose 'All commands,' which is the third item down from the top. In the list box below the drop-down, a long list of commands will appear, sorted alphabetically. Locate the command named 'Forms,' click on it, and click the 'Add' button in the center of the screen. Click 'OK' to close the Excel Options screen, and the Forms button will appear next to the Re-do button at the top of the screen.
3. Open the spreadsheet with the rows that are to be viewed in forms. Click on a cell that is in the list of data the form is to be for. It can be a heading cell or any cell within the data. Click on the Forms button that was added in step 1. Excel will automatically create the form.
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How to Paste Special HTML in Microsoft Excel 2003


1. Create the desired HTML that you wish to paste special into Excel with.
2. Copy the HTML code. You can easily copy the HTML by highlighting it all and pressing the hotkeys “CTRL-A” and then by pressing the hotkeys “CTRL-C.”
3. Access the 'Paste special' menu. To access this menu, you will need to scroll to the “Edit” tab and select “Paste Special.”
4. Set the paste special options. Under the paste special properties menu, in the “As” box, you should left-click on “HTML” to select the format.
5. Paste special the HTML into Excel. Now click on the “OK” button to paste special HTML into Excel.
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How to Speed Up an ODC Connection in Excel 2007


1. Open the Microsoft Excel 2007 program on your computer and then click the 'Microsoft Office' button.
2. Click the 'Open' option and then select the Excel 2007 worksheet you want to speed up an ODC connection for. Click the 'Open' button.
3. Click the 'Data' tab from the top of the application and then click the 'Connections' option from the 'Connections' group.
4. Select the 'Usage' tab in the Workbook Connections dialog box. Click on each box in the 'Refresh control' section so that they're deselected.
5. Enter a lower number of records to retrieve in the 'Maximum number of records to retrieve' field.
6. Click the 'Definition' tab and then click the 'Parameter' button. You can then edit the parameters for your ODC query. For example, you can make your query as short as possible to speed up the connectivity.
7. Click the 'Apply' button to save all of your changes and then click the 'OK' button to close out of the dialog box.
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Saturday, November 23, 2013

How to Insert a Picture or Logo into an Excel Document


1. Open the Excel document that you want to add the logo or picture to.
2. Click Insert and select Header Footer from the Text group.
3. Click inside the header or footer where you wish the picture to appear.
4. Click Picture under Header Footer Tools in the Header Footer Elements group on the Design tab.
5. Select your picture and click 'Insert.' The picture will appear where you clicked.
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How to Delete Characters Over 40 Character Length in Excel


1. Click the 'Start' button on the taskbar, type 'Microsoft Excel' in the Search box and then press 'Enter.'
2. Press 'Ctrl O' and then choose the Excel document from which you want to delete characters over 40 characters in length on the dialog box that opens.
3. Type the formula '=LEFT(cell_number,40)' in the cell in which you want to delete characters over 40 characters in length. Replace, cell_number with the unique number of the cell, for example, A1.
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How to Generate a Random Number in Excel


1. Open Microsoft Excel 2007, and start a new, blank spreadsheet or open an existing spreadsheet from your files into which you want to generate a random number.
2. Click the cell you want to generate a random number into so it is selected. The cell will have a thick black line outlining it.
3. Type '=RAND()' (no quotations) into the 'Formula' text box near the top of the Excel screen. This is the function that instructs Excel to enter a random number between 0 and 1 into the selected cell.
4. Press the 'Enter' key on your keyboard. The random number will be generated into the selected cell and you will be taken to the cell beneath it.
5. Continue the process of generating random numbers into your Excel cells using the same method as outlined above.
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How to Fill the Cells With the Names of the Successive Months in Excel


1. Open a new Microsoft Excel 2010 spreadsheet.
2. Click on cell “A1” and type in the name of the first month you want to use. Excel can begin to fill successive months from any month, so you don’t necessarily need to have “January” be first. You can also add the year, if necessary. Excel will automatically add to the year as it adds each successive month. Press “Enter” when you are done entering the month.
3. Click on cell “A1” again, as Excel will change the selected cell once you pressed “Enter.” Move your mouse over the lower-right corner of the cell. Your pointer will change into a “ ” sign.
4. Click and hold the mouse button. Drag the mouse down the spreadsheet. As you move the mouse, a small pop-up window will display the month that will appear in the last selected cell, so you can tell how far you need to drag the mouse.
5. Release the mouse button when you have reached the last cell that you want to fill with month names. Excel will automatically add the names of the successive months to each cell, starting from the first month that you entered.
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How to Calculate Weighted Averages for Grades in Excel


1. Type 'Grade' in cell A1, 'Weight' in B1 and 'Total Worth' in C1.
2. Type your grades in column A. For example, if you received a 95 and an 80, then type '95' in A2 and '80' in A3.
3. Type the weight each grade has in column B, next to its corresponding grade. In the example, if the first grade is worth 60% and the second grade is worth 40%, then type 60% in B2 and 40% in B3.
4. Type '=A2*B2' in cell C2. This weights the grades. Copy and paste this formula next to each grade.
5. Type '=sum(' in column C after your last grade, then highlight all the cells that have a number in coumn C and hit the 'Enter' key. The result that appears is your weighted average.
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How to Use the AutoFill Function in Excel 2003


1. Open Excel.
2. Open your worksheet by clicking 'File > Open.'
3. If you don't have an existing worksheet, create a new one. Go to 'File > New.'
4. Enter your information. The AutoFill function will be able to fill in information in a series. When making a calendar, for example, you can type 'January' into the first box and use AutoFill to put the subsequent months in the next cells.
5. Place your mouse over the bottom right hand corner of the cell with 'January' (or whatever the first cell in your series is). When you see a small 'x' appear where your mouse arrow was, click and drag the 'x' to the cell where your series will end. The rest of the series should be filled in for you.
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How to Reduce the Size of an Excel Workbook


1. Delete the extra default worksheets in a new Excel workbook. Each new workbook that Excel creates has three worksheets (Sheet1, Sheet2 and Sheet3). These sheets require additional memory and space on the hard drive when you save your workbook. Right click on the name tab (at the bottom of the workbook) for the second worksheet. Then choose Delete from the pop-up context menu. Repeat these steps to delete the third worksheet.
2. Reduce the size of graphics, line art or smart art that you have inserted or imported into the workbook. Graphics quickly increase the size of every saved Excel file. Click on any embedded graphic object to activate the Picture Tools menu. Compress, crop or decrease the color saturation and resolution of jpeg, gif, bmp, tiff and png files. You can also use an external graphics program to resize clipart and other file formats, and then insert the smaller sized object into your workbook.
3. Use TrueType fonts as the default font for your Excel worksheet labels. Custom fonts require additional memory allocations. Excel stores the instructions for your printer in the workbook. Therefore, your file size will increase with each custom font.
4. Apply text formats such as bold, italics and colors to individual cells only. If you select a row or column when adding formats, Excel applies the formatting to all cells in the selection. Since Excel has more than 200 columns and thousands of rows, the formatting will use Random Access Memory to manage the formats for the rows and columns.
5. Eliminate unnecessary comments, text boxes and other enhancements such as watermarks, cell shading and borders. All of them require additional space when you save the file. Headers, footers, page numbers, charts, hyperlinks, tables and range names in formulas also increase the size of an Excel workbook. Printing options such as gridline displays and repeated row and column headings can also be eliminated to reduce the size of your workbook.
6. Save your workbook in PDF format. This option is included in Excel 2007; most earlier versions require an add-in that you must download. Choose Save As in the File menu in Excel versions through 2003. It is under the Microsoft Office Button menu (left of Home) in Excel 2007. Select PDF from the menu. Then select the Optimize for minimum size radio button in the file Save dialog box. This creates a smaller PDF file that is ready to email or publish online.
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How to Use a Data Form in Microsoft Excel 2007


1. Open the Microsoft Excel 2007 program on your computer and then click on any cell where you want the form to start.
2. Click on the arrow next to the Quick Access toolbar and then click on the 'More Commands' option. Select 'All Commands' and then click on the 'Form' button from the list.
3. Click on the 'Add' button and then 'OK.' Click 'Form' from the Quick Access toolbar, and then you can enter your data into the first row of the form.
4. Click on the 'New' button to add a new row and then enter your data. Press the 'Enter' key on your keyboard, and the row of data will be added to the bottom of the form.
5. Select any row that you want to remove and then click on the 'Delete' button. Choose 'Close' at any time to close out of the data form and return to your worksheet.
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How to Find Duplicate Entries on an Excel Spreadsheet


1. Select the first cell in your column of data. This cell will serve as a template for the conditional statement that searches for duplicates in the file. After the cell is selected, click the 'Format' menu item and select 'Conditional Formatting.' This opens a new dialog window.
2. Select 'Formula Is' in the new dialog window. A text box displays, prompting you for an Excel formula. Enter the following code into the text box:=COUNTIF (A:A,A1) > 1The 'countif' function searches through the 'A' column and finds any duplicates (the formula assumes that A1 is your first cell. If your data begins at A2, replace 'A1' with 'A2' in the formula. Replace each 'A' with a 'B' to check column B, etc.).
3. Click the 'Format' button in the 'Conditional Formatting' dialog box. This opens a window prompting you for a color selection. Click a color you want to use as the highlight color for the duplicates. The 'countif' function finds the duplicates, and the format color is used to show you which cells are found. Click 'OK.'
4. With your cursor in the first data cell, click 'Copy' from the Edit menu. Press 'Ctrl spacebar' then click 'Paste Special' from the Edit menu. Select 'Formats' from the Paste Special dialog, then click 'OK' to copy the conditional formatting through the entire column.
5. Scroll down the column of data to find each duplicate. The duplicates are highlighted in the color you chose. You can either delete these duplicates, exclude them from future formulas or move them to another area of the spreadsheet.
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How to Use Excel's DSUM Function


1. Learn the syntax of DSUM (database, field, criteria). Database is a cell range that specifies the database, field is a column in the database from which DSUM will add values and criteria is a cell range with the criteria to be used in selecting the values.
2. Define the database for DSUM. The first cell in the range will indicate the upper left corner of the database array and the second cell will indicate the lower right corner of the array. The first row of the array must contain the column names.
3. Specify the field for DSUM. It can include the column name enclosed in double quotation marks or a number representing the column's position in the database where 1 is the first column, 2 is the second column and so on.
4. Supply the criteria for DSUM. This cell range must contain at least one column name and one condition for that column. The condition will generally be of the form ='condition.' Thus, a value of ='=Apple' would select rows where the value in the specified column is equal to 'Apple.'
5. Enter the following in the first four columns of an Excel spreadsheet:Row 1: Tree, Height, Age and Yield;
Row 2: ='=Apple' and ='>10' (nothing in columns three and four);
Row 3: ='=Pear' (nothing in columns two, three and four);
Row 4: Tree, Height, Age and Yield;
Row 5: Apple, 18, 20 and 14;
Row 6: Pear, 12, 12 and 10;
Row 7: Cherry, 13, 14 and 9;
Row 8: Apple, 14, 15 and 10;
Row 9: Pear, 9, 8 and 8; and
Row 10: Apple, 8, 9 and 6.
6. Interpret the formula =DSUM(A4:D10,'Yield',A1:B2) as follows: The database is defined as the array A4:D10. Note the column names in the first row of this array. 'Yield' is the column name from which the values will be taken. The criteria are given by A1:B2 which indicates that the column named Tree must contain 'Apple' and the column named Height must contain a value greater than 10. DSUM(A4:D10,'Yield',A1:B2) will therefore be evaluated as SUM(14,10)=24.
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Friday, November 22, 2013

How to Convert Columns of Text to Rows


1. Click the letter at the top of a column to select a column. Hold 'Ctrl' and click on more column headers to choose several columns.
2. Press 'Ctrl' and 'X' to cut the selected columns.
3. Right-click inside the first cell into which you want to paste the data as rows.
4. Select 'Paste Special' from the drop-down menu.
5. Select the 'Transpose' check box in the 'Paste Special' dialog box.
6. Click 'OK.' The columns will now appear as rows.
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How to Share Password Protect Track Changes in Excel


Password Protection for Specific Cells
1. Determine the level of protection needed for your spreadsheet. If there are specific cells you do not want changed but others that can be, you can just lock cells. If the spreadsheet needs to be fully locked, or you want to prevent users from accessing the actual file, then file-level protection is appropriate.
2. Click 'Home' on the ribbon after opening a file in Excel.
3. Navigate to the Cells section, click 'format,' and then click 'Lock Cell.'
Password Protection for Workbooks
4. On the ribbon click 'Review.'
5. Navigate to the changes group and click 'Protect Workbook.' This will bring up a pop-up window.
6. Select 'Structure' or 'Windows' from the pop-up window. If you lock the structure, users will not be able to reorder worksheets. If you lock windows, users will not be able to change worksheet window sizes.
7. Choose and write down a password to lock the workbook. This is optional, but enhances the security of your worksheet.
Tracking Changes
8. On the ribbon click 'Review.'
9. Navigate to the changes group and click on 'Share Workbook.' This will bring up a pop-up window.
10. Select the check box next to 'allow changes by more than one user at the same time.' Then click on the 'Advanced' tab and type in the number of days you want Excel to keep the change history. Click 'OK.' Note that Excel defaults to 30 days of change history. This is sufficient for most users.
11. Navigate to the changes group and click on 'Track Changes.' Then select 'Highlight Changes.' This will highlight any changes made to a cell so that you will be able to review it later.
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How to Do Stacked Charts in Excel


1. Enter the data for the stacked chart into an Excel spreadsheet. Clearly label the data in the first row so that it is easier to identify when you are making the chart.
2.
Highlighting the data tells Excel which data to include in the chart.
Highlight the data you want to include in the stacked chart. Include the data labels (typically placed in the first row). You can highlight by clicking your left mouse button, holding it down, and dragging to include all pieces of data. Alternatively, to include the entire spreadsheet in the chart, press 'Ctrl-A' to highlight everything.
3. Open the chart interface. In Excel 2007, click the 'Insert' tab, then click the down arrow under Column, and click 'All Chart Types.' In Excel 2010, click the 'Insert' tab and click 'Chart.'
4. Choose the chart type by clicking or scrolling to the corresponding section. The most common type of stacked chart is column, but you may also choose bar.
5. Choose stacked chart style by clicking the corresponding stacked style under the chart type. Verify that the style you have chosen is stacked by hovering over it and looking for 'stacked' in the tool tip description. Choose a 100 percent stacked style if you want all bars to be full and display the composition breakdown. Choose the style that most clearly displays your data and fits your taste.
6. Press 'OK' and verify the data.
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Thursday, November 21, 2013

How to Audit Formulas in Excel 2007


1. Open an existing Microsoft Excel document to audit. Double click on the 'My computer' icon on the operating system desktop. Then locate the existing Excel document and double click on that file.
2. Select the 'Microsoft Office Main Menu Button' located in the top right hand corner of Microsoft Excel. From that menu click on the 'Excel Options' button located at the bottom of the menu dialogue box.
3. Click on the 'Advanced' options button on the Excel options dialogue box.
4. Check all the options under the 'Display Options for This Workbook' section. Also, make sure that the 'For Object: Show' option choose 'All.'
5. Show all the formulas in an Excel worksheet by selecting all the cells. Do this by clicking on the top left hand corner of the worksheet. Once they are all selected click on the 'Formulas' tab and choose 'Show All Formulas' from the formula auditing section of the formulas tab.
6. Audit the formulas by choosing the 'Error Checking' button in the formula auditing section of formula ribbon. A user can also trace dependents and precedents by choosing the 'Trace Dependents' and 'Trace Precedents' option from the very same section of the formula auditing section of the formulas ribbon.
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How to Subtract Dates in Excel 2007


1. Open Excel 2007 and enter the current date in cell A1. Enter another date in cell B1.
2. Highlight cells A1 and B1. Click the 'Home' tab and locate the 'Numbers' group. Change the number format to 'Short Date.'
3. Click cell C1 and enter a subtraction formula. Enter 'A1-B1.' Press the 'Enter' key to see the results.
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Wednesday, November 20, 2013

How to Create a Toggle Switch in Excel 2003


1. Open Microsoft Excel 2003. Click the 'Microsoft' button on the top left corner of the window. Click the 'Excel Options' button in the lower right corner of the dropdown menu.
2. Click the 'Popular' tab. On the box to the right, check the 'Show Developers tab in the Ribbon' box. Click the 'OK' button on the bottom right of the window.
3. Click the 'Insert' button in the top center of the window. Click on the 'Toggle' button on the bottom right corner of the dropdown menu.
4. Click the left mouse button anywhere on the screen. The toggle button appears. Click and hold the left mouse button on the 'Toggle' button to move it. Your toggle switch is now created.
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How to Merge Two Macros in Excel


1. Create a master macro by clicking on the 'View' tab in the toolbar. Click on 'Macros' and select 'View Macros.' Type the name of the master macro, such as 'Master,' in the 'Macro name' box. Click on the 'Create' button to launch the Visual Basic editor.
2. Place the cursor in the second line under the subroutine. For example, if the name of the macro you created is 'Master,' the first line is 'Sub Master().' Under this line, type 'Call,' followed by the name of the first macro you would like to run. For example, if you created a macro called 'GetWebQueries' that loops through a list of URLs, opening each one and copying and pasting the data from a table into a new worksheet, you would type 'Call GetWebQueries().'
3. Press 'Enter' to go to the next line. Type 'Call,' followed by the name of the second macro, such as 'Call Format(),' which would run the Format macro that formats each worksheet in a specified manner. Save the macro and close the Visual Basic editor.
4. Run the master macro by clicking on the 'View' tab. Click on 'Macros' and select 'View Macros.' Select the master macro and click on the 'Run' button. The master macro will run 'GetWebQueries' and the 'Format' macros in the specified order.
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How to Filter Excel for Duplicate Names


1. Open your Excel spreadsheet.
2. Select one or more columns in which you suspect there are duplicate values.
3. Click on the 'Data' tab at the top of the screen, then the 'Remove Duplicates' icon.
4. Check the boxes with suspected duplicates in the dialog box that opens.
5. Click 'OK.' Another box will appear, telling you how many duplicates have been removed and how many unique values remain.
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Tuesday, November 19, 2013

How to Remove All the Blank Rows in Excel 2007


1. Open Excel 2007 and select a workbook. Select the 'Office' button and click 'Open.' Search your network for the workbook. Click the workbook and select 'Open.' The workbook opens.
2. Select the first column header in your workbook. Select the 'Home' tab and click 'Filter' from the 'Sort Filter' button in the 'Editing' group. Notice the dropdown icons that appear in your column headers.
3. Select a column header that may contain blank data. Click the dropdown icon. Scroll down in the list and locate 'Blanks.' Remove the check. The blank rows from this column are removed.
4. Repeat this step for each column that may contain blank data. Once you have done this for each affected column, all of the blank rows will be removed from your Excel 2007 workbook.
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