Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

What is a Spreadsheet? A spreadsheet consists of the following items –A worksheet divided into rows and columns 256 vertical columns & 65,535 horizontal.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "What is a Spreadsheet? A spreadsheet consists of the following items –A worksheet divided into rows and columns 256 vertical columns & 65,535 horizontal."— Presentation transcript:

1 What is a Spreadsheet? A spreadsheet consists of the following items –A worksheet divided into rows and columns 256 vertical columns & 65,535 horizontal rows Columns identified by letters (A, B, C, and so on) Rows are numbered (1, 2, 3, …) –Cells  An intersection of a row and column Identified by their column letters followed by their row numbers –Numbers –Labels –Formulas

2 Anatomy of the Window Title bar Workbook name Ribbon Menu bar Formula bar Status Bar Sheet tabs Current sheet Row heading Active cell Column headings Gridlines Scroll bars

3 Entering Information into a cell Select cell where you want to type data Type a number, label, or formula Do any of the following –Press Enter –Click Green Check Mark next to formula bar –Press an arrow key to select a different cell –Click a different cell

4 Excel Concepts Cell reference  how we refer to a specific cell. –A10 or Data!A10 or [Book2.xls]Sheet1!A10 or C:\MyData\ [Book2.xls]Sheet1!A10 Range  A rectangular group of one or more cells –Referenced by top left cell separated from bottom right reference by a colon.

5 More Concepts Selection –Range of cells, highlighted –Fill handle Formatting –The manner in which a cell entry is displayed can be changed by formatting the cell. –Font, background, number of decimals, scientific notation, horizontal and vertical positioning, borders

6 Examples Filling in a Series of Numbers or a list of dates Entering and Copying a Formula –All formulas begin with (=) –3 + 4 * 2  11 or 14? –Refer to values in cells Copy vs. Move formula

7 Arithmetic Operator Order Negation (-) Exponentiation (^) Multiplication and division (*,/) Addition and subtraction (+,-)

8 Formatting your worksheet Manually formatting your cells –Number –Alignment –Font –Boarder –Patterns –Protection

9 More Formatting Conditional Formatting Removing Formatting –Eraser too (Under editing)  Clear Formats Adjusting column widths and row heights –With the mouse

10 Common Formula Calculations OperatorWhat it doesExampleResult +Addition=5+3.48.4 -Subtraction=54.2-2.152.1 *Multiplication=1.2*44.8 /Division=25/55 %Percentage=42%0.42 ^Exponentiation=4^364 =Equal=6=7False >Greater than=7>2True <Less than=9<8False >=Greater than or equal to =45>=3True <=Less than or equal to=40<=2False <>Not equal to=5<>7True &Text concatenation=“Bo the ” & “Cat”Bo the Cat

11 Using cell references in formulas Referencing a single cell =B5+B6 AutoSum Σ –Sum, Average, Count, Max, Min Referencing two or more cells –Contiguous range =SUM(D3:D5) –Noncontiguous range SUM(D3,G5,X7)

12 Copying formulas Excel changes the formula cell reference automatically when for each row or column –Ctrl+C then Ctrl+V Editing a formula Ctrl+` to show all formulas Absolute, Relative, & Mixed References –$A$1, $A1, A$1, A1

13 Naming cells and ranges Name box Jumping to a named cell (downward- pointing arrow) Acts as an absolute reference

14 Picking a Function to Use Entering a Function Directly –Example =Sin(A1), =Pi(), =Degrees(A1), =Radians(A1) Insert function button –Function Palette Entering Formulas by Pointing

15 Finding where a formula gets its data Formula Auditing toolbar –Tracing Precendents –Tracing Dependents –Adding Comments

16 Printing a Worksheet Using Print Preview Printing part of a worksheet –Highlight cells that you want to print –Page Layout  Print Area  Set Print Area Page Setup –Under print preview Portrait, Landscape, Fit to … –Margins –Header/Footer

17 Paste Special RAND() Paste Special

18 Modifying Worksheets Insert/Delete rows and columns Link worksheets w/ formulas Split a worksheet (under view tab)

19 Formulas Editing a formula Ctrl+` to show all formulas Absolute, Relative, & Mixed References –$A$1, $A1, A$1, A1 –Using named cells in formulas (names are absolute references)

20 Naming Cells using labels Insert  Name  Create Names are not case sensitive

21 Picking a Function to Use Insert function button –Function Palette Function Arguments –=Pi() –=COS(Pi())=SQRT(A2/2) –=ROUND(A2,2) –=SUM(A1:A10) or =SUM(A1:A10,B3,B4) Entering Formulas by Pointing Commas separate each argument

22 Trig Functions Trig functions (always in radians) –RADIANS, DEGREES, SIN, COS, ATAN, … Exponential Functions –EXP, LN, LOG Rounding Functions –ABS, CEILING, EVEN, FLOOR, INT, MROUND, ODD, ROUND, ROUNDDOWN, ROUNDUP, TRUNC

23 Errors in Formulas ######  Column is too narrow #DIV/0!  Formula divides a number by zero. Black cells have a value of zero #NAME?  Formula containes a function name or cell that Excel does not recognize #REF!  Formula refers to a cell that is not valid #VALUE!  Formula refers to a cell that Excel cannot use in calculation Circular Reference  Formula refers to the cell containing the formula


Download ppt "What is a Spreadsheet? A spreadsheet consists of the following items –A worksheet divided into rows and columns 256 vertical columns & 65,535 horizontal."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google