- •Table of Contents
- •About the Author
- •Dedication
- •Foreword
- •Acknowledgments
- •Why Does Office 365 Have Better Features?
- •Which Version of Office 365 Has Power Pivot?
- •Why Do I Have to Sign in to Excel?
- •How Can I Use Excel on Dual Monitors?
- •How Can I Open The Same Workbook Twice?
- •Find Icons on the Ribbon
- •Where is File, Exit?
- •Where Are My Macros?
- •Customizing the Ribbon
- •Go Wide
- •Minimize the Ribbon to Free Up a Few More Rows
- •Use a Wheel Mouse to Scroll Through The Ribbon Tabs
- •Why Do The Charting Ribbon Tabs Keep Disappearing?
- •Use Dialog Launchers For More Choices
- •Icon, Dropdowns, and Hybrids
- •Zoom is at the Bottom
- •Make Your Most-Used Icons Always Visible
- •The Excel 2003 Alt Keystrokes Still Work (If You Type Them Slowly Enough)
- •Use Keyboard Shortcuts to Access the Ribbon
- •Why Do I Have Only 65,536 Rows?
- •Which File Format Should I Use?
- •Why Does The File Menu Cover The Entire Screen?
- •How Do I Close The File Menu?
- •Increase the Number of Workbooks in the Recent Files List
- •Change All Print Settings in Excel
- •I Just Want The Old Print Preview Back
- •Get Quick Access to Formatting Options Using the Mini Toolbar
- •What Is Protected Mode?
- •Use a Trusted Location to Prevent Excel’s Constant Warnings
- •My Manager Wants Me to Create a New Expense Report from Scratch
- •Open a Copy of a Workbook
- •Open Excel with Ctrl+Alt+X
- •Have Excel Always Open Certain Workbook(s)
- •Set up Excel Icons to Open a Specific File on Startup
- •Use a Macro to Customize Startup
- •Control Settings for Every New Workbook and Worksheet
- •Excel Says I Have Links, But I Can Not Find Them
- •Automatically Move the Cell Pointer After Enter
- •Return to the First Column After Typing the Last Column
- •Enter Data in a Circle (Or Any Pattern)
- •How to See Headings as You Scroll Around a Report
- •How to See Headings and Row Labels as You Scroll Around a Report
- •Why is the Scrollbar Slider Suddenly Tiny?
- •Why Won’t My Scrollbar Scroll to My Charts?
- •Jump to the Edge of the Data
- •Jump to Next Corner of Selection
- •Ctrl+Backspace brings the Active Cell into View
- •Zoom with the Wheel Mouse
- •Copy a Formula to All Data Rows
- •A Faster Way To Paste Values
- •Quickly Turn a Range on Its Side
- •Quickly Rearrange Rows Or Columns
- •Quickly Copy Worksheets
- •Use Group Mode to Change All Worksheets
- •Find Text Numbers
- •Why Can’t Excel Find a Number?
- •Mix Formatting In A Single Cell
- •Enter a Series of Months, Days, or More by Using the Fill Handle
- •Have the Fill Handle Fill Your List of Part Numbers
- •Teach Excel to Fill A, B, C
- •Add Total to the End of Jan, Feb, ... Dec
- •Put Date & Time in a Cell
- •Use Excel as a Word Processor
- •Add Excel to Word
- •Use Hyperlinks to Create an Opening Menu for a Workbook
- •Spell check a Region
- •Stop Excel from AutoCorrecting Certain Words
- •Use AutoCorrect to Enable a Shortcut
- •Why Won’t the Track Changes Feature Work in Excel?
- •Simultaneously Collaborate on a Workbook with Excel Web App
- •How to Print Titles at the Top of Each Page
- •Print a Letter at the Top of Page 1 and Repeat Headings at the Top of Each Subsequent Page
- •How to Print Page Numbers at the Bottom of Each Page
- •How to Make a Wide Report Fit to One Page Wide by Many Pages Tall
- •Add a Printable Watermark
- •Print Multiple Ranges
- •Add a Page Break at Each Change in Customer
- •Save My Worksheet as a PDF File
- •Send an Excel File as an Attachment
- •Save Excel Data as a Text File
- •Close All Open Workbooks
- •I Just Closed an Unsaved Workbook
- •Roll Back to an AutoSaved Version
- •Have Excel Talk to You
- •Enter Special Symbols
- •What Do All the Triangles Mean?
- •Why does Excel Insert Cell Addresses When I Edit In a RefEdit Box?
- •F4 Repeats Last Command
- •Print all Excel Keyboard Shortcuts
- •Create a Personal Macro Workbook
- •Macro to Toggle Positive to Negative
- •Assign a Macro to a Shortcut Key
- •Assign a Macro to a Toolbar Icon
- •Use a Macro to Change Case to Upper, Lower, or Proper
- •Get Free Excel Help
- •Start a Formula with = or +
- •Three Methods of Entering Formulas
- •Why Does Excel 2013 Look Like A Slot Machine?
- •Use Parentheses to Control the Order of Calculations
- •Long Formulas in the Formula Bar
- •Copy a Formula That Contains Relative References
- •Copy a Formula While Keeping One Reference Fixed
- •Create a Multiplication Table
- •Calculate a Sales Commission
- •Simplify the Entry of Dollar Signs in Formulas
- •Learn R1C1 Referencing to Understand Formula Copying
- •Create Easier-to-Understand Formulas with Named Ranges
- •See All Named Ranges at 39% Zoom
- •Use Named Constants to Store Numbers
- •Total Without Using a Formula
- •Add or Multiply Two Columns Without Using Formulas
- •Type 123 to Enter 1.23
- •Join Two Text Columns
- •Concatenate Several Cells
- •Join Text with a Date or Currency
- •Break Data Apart Using Flash Fill
- •Parse Data using Text to Columns
- •Excel Is Randomly Parsing Pasted Data
- •I Lose Leading Zeroes From CSV Files
- •Open CSV File With Dates in D/M/Y Format
- •Handle Dates in YYYYMMDD format
- •My G/L Software Uses a Trailing Minus for Negative Numbers
- •Parse Data With Leader Lines
- •Parse Multi-Line Cells
- •Change Smith, Jane to Jane Smith
- •Convert Numbers to Text
- •Fill a Cell with Repeating Characters
- •CLEAN Hasn’t Kept Up With The Times
- •Add the Worksheet Name as a Title
- •Use AutoSum to Quickly Enter a Total Formula
- •AutoSum Doesn’t Always Predict My Data Correctly
- •Use the AutoSum Button to Enter Averages, Min, Max, and Count
- •Ditto The Formula Above
- •The Count Option of the AutoSum Dropdown Doesn’t Appear to Work
- •Total the Red Cells
- •Automatically Number a List of Employees
- •Automatically Number the Visible Rows
- •Discover New Functions Using the fx Button
- •Get Help on Any Function While Entering a Formula
- •Use F9 in the Formula Bar to Test a Formula
- •Quick Calculator
- •When Entering a Formula, You Get the Formula Instead of the Result
- •Highlight All Formula Cells Using Conditional Formatting
- •You Change a Cell in Excel but the Formulas Do Not Calculate
- •Calculate One Range
- •Why Use the Intersection Operator?
- •Understand Implicit Intersection
- •Find the Longest Win Streak
- •Add B5 On All Worksheets
- •Consider Formula Speed
- •Exact Formula Copy
- •Calculate a Loan Payment
- •Calculate Many Scenarios for Loan Payments
- •Back into an Answer Using Goal Seek
- •Create an Amortization Table
- •Do 40 What-if Analyses Quickly
- •Random Walk Down Wall Street
- •What-If For 3 Or More Variables
- •Rank Scores
- •Round Numbers
- •Round to the Nearest $0.05 with MROUND
- •Round Prices to the Next Highest $5
- •Round 0.5 towards Even Per ASTM-E29
- •Separate the Integer From the Decimals
- •Why Is This Price Showing $27.85000001 Cents?
- •Calculate a Percentage of Total
- •Calculate a Running Percentage of Total
- •Use the ^ Sign for Exponents
- •Raise a Number to a Fraction to Find the Square or Third Root
- •Calculate a Growth Rate
- •Find the Area of a Circle
- •Figure Out Lottery Probability
- •Help Your Kids with Their Math
- •Convert Units
- •XOR Only Works Correctly for Two Values
- •Find the Second Largest Value
- •Format Every Other Row in Green
- •\Use IF to Calculate a Bonus
- •IF with Two Conditions
- •Tiered Commission Plan with IF
- •Display Up/Down Arrows
- •Stop Showing Zeroes in Cell Links
- •Count Records That Match a Criterion
- •Build a Table That Will Count by Criteria
- •Sum Records That Match a Criterion
- •Can the Results of a Formula Be Used in SUMIF?
- •Calculate Based on Multiple Conditions
- •Avoid Errors Using IFERROR
- •Use VLOOKUP to Join Two Tables
- •Every VLOOKUP Ends in False
- •Lookup Table Does Not Have to Be Sorted
- •Beware of #N/A from VLOOKUP
- •Add New Items to the Middle Of Your Lookup Table
- •Consider Naming the Lookup Table
- •Remove Leading and Trailing Spaces
- •Your Lookup Table Can Go Across
- •Copy a VLOOKUP Across Many Columns
- •INDEX Sounds Like an Inane Function
- •You Already Know MATCH, Really!
- •INDEX Sounds Like an Inane Function - II
- •VLOOKUP Left
- •Fast Multi-Column VLOOKUP
- •Speed Up Your VLOOKUP
- •Return the Next Larger Value in a Lookup
- •Two-Way Lookup
- •Combine Formulas into a Mega-Formula
- •Combine Two Lists Using VLOOKUP
- •Watch for Duplicates When Using VLOOKUP
- •Return the Last Entry
- •Return the Last Matching Value
- •Sum All of the Lookups
- •Embed a Small Lookup Table In Formula
- •I Don’t Want to Use a Lookup Table to Choose One of Five Choices
- •Is there Something More Flexible than CHOOSE?
- •Lookup Two Values
- •Add Comments to a Formula
- •Create Random Numbers
- •Randomly Sequence a List
- •Play Dice Games with Excel
- •Generate Random Without Repeats
- •Calculate a Trendline Forecast
- •Forecast Data with Seasonality
- •Build a Model to Predict Sales Based on Multiple Regression
- •Switching Columns into Rows Using a Formula
- •SUM a Range that is C5 Rows Tall Using OFFSET
- •Replace Volatile OFFSET with INDEX
- •How Can You Test for Volatility?
- •Whatever Happened to the @@ Function?
- •Tables Are Like a Database in Excel
- •Dealing with Table Formulas
- •Rename Your Tables
- •Charts , VLOOKUP & Pivots Expand With The Table
- •Before Deleting a Cell, Find out if Other Cells Rely on It
- •Calculate a Formula in Slow Motion
- •Which Cells Flow into This Cell?
- •Color all Precedents or Dependents
- •Monitor Distant Cells
- •Auditing Worksheets with Inquire
- •Use Real Dates
- •How Can I Tell If Have Real Dates?
- •Convert Text Dates to Real Dates
- •Format Dates
- •Format Dates As Quarters or Weeks
- •Display Monthly Dates
- •Add a Column to Show Month or Weekday
- •Calculate First of Month
- •Calculate the Last Day of the Month
- •Calculate Invoice Due Dates
- •Calculate Receivable Aging
- •NOW, or TODAY?
- •Find the Last Sunday Of the Month
- •Calculate Work Days
- •Calculate Work Days for a Farmers Market
- •Calculate Age in Years, Months, Days
- •Coerce an Array of Dates from 2 Dates
- •Use Real Times
- •Strangeness of Time Formatting
- •Convert Time to Decimal Hours
- •Calculate with Time
- •Enter Minutes and Seconds
- •Convert Text to Time
- •Can Excel Track Negative Time?
- •Fill Blanks With Value Above
- •See Formulas in Excel 2013
- •Create a Bell Curve in Excel
- •Change from Lower to Upper Case in Excel
- •Spell Out Numbers in Excel
- •Copy Macro Code from the Internet Into an Add-In
- •Return Data from a Webservice in Excel 2013
- •Add New Functions to Excel with Fast Excel SpeedTools Extras
- •=SUM(B1:B5) is Better Than =B1+B2+B3+B4+B5
- •How to Set up Your Data for Easy Sorting and Subtotals
- •How to Fit a Multiline Heading into One Cell
- •No Tiny Blank Columns Between Columns
- •How to Sort Data
- •Sort Days of the Week
- •Sort a Report into a Custom Sequence
- •Sort All Red Cells to the Top of a Report
- •Sort Pictures With Data
- •Quickly Filter a List to Certain Records
- •Use Search While Filtering
- •Filter by Selection
- •Use AutoSum After Filtering
- •Filter Only Some Columns
- •Find the Unique Values in a Column
- •Use Advanced Filter
- •Replace Multiple Filter Criteria with a Single Row of Formulas
- •Add Subtotals to a Data set
- •Use Group & Outline Buttons to Collapse Subtotaled Data
- •Manually Apply Groups
- •Group Report Sections
- •Copy Just Totals from Subtotaled Data
- •Sort Largest Customers to the Top
- •Select 100 Columns in Subtotals
- •Enter a Grand Total of Data Manually Subtotaled
- •Add Other Text to the Subtotal Lines
- •Subtotals by Product Within Region
- •Format the Subtotal Rows
- •My Manager Wants a Blank Line After Each Subtotal
- •Subtotal One Column and Count Another Column
- •Can You Get Medians?
- •Horizontal Subtotals
- •Be Wary
- •Send Error Reports
- •Help Make Excel Better
- •Remove Blank Rows from a Range
- •Remove Blanks from a Range While Keeping the Original Sequence
- •Double Space Your Data Set
- •Use Find to Find an Asterisk
- •Use an Ampersand in a Header
- •Hide Zeros & Other Custom Number Formatting Tricks
- •Use Consolidation to Combine Two Lists
- •Combine Four Quarterly Reports
- •Find Total Sales by Customer by Combining Duplicates
- •Remove Duplicates
- •Preview Remove Duplicates Without Removing Them
- •Protect Cells That Contain Formulas
- •Find Differences In Two Lists
- •Number Each Record, Starting at 1 for a New Customer
- •Deal with Data in Which Each Record Takes Five Physical Rows
- •Add a Customer Number to Each Detail Record
- •Use a Built-in Data Entry Form
- •Cell AutoComplete Stopped Working
- •Data Cleansing with Flash Fill in Excel 2013
- •Flash Fill was there and is now Gone
- •Flash Fill Was Not Perfect
- •Flash Fill Won’t Fill Numbers
- •Flash Fill and Dates
- •Flash Fill and Ambiguous Data
- •Use a Pivot Table to Summarize Detailed Data
- •Your Manager Wants Your Report Changed
- •Add or Remove Fields from an Existing Pivot Table
- •Summarize Pivot Table Data by Three Measures
- •Why Does the Pivot Table Field List Keep Disappearing?
- •Move or Change Part of a Pivot Table
- •See Detail Behind One Number in a Pivot Table
- •Use Multiple Value Fields as a Column or Row Field
- •Update Data Behind a Pivot Table
- •Why do I Get a Count Instead of a Sum?
- •Convert Your Data to a Table Before Adding Records
- •Create a Flattened Pivot Table for Reuse
- •Replace Blanks in a Pivot Table with Zeros
- •Collapse and Expand Pivot Fields
- •Specify a Number Format for a Pivot Table Field
- •Preserve Column Widths
- •Show Yes/No in a Pivot Table
- •Pivot Table Format Defaults
- •Format Pivot Tables with the Gallery
- •None of the 46,273 Built-In Styles Do What My Manager Asks For
- •Select Pivot Table Parts For Formatting
- •Apply Conditional Formatting to a Pivot Table
- •Can I Save Formatting in a Template?
- •Manually Re-sequence the Order of Data in a Pivot Table
- •Present a Pivot Table in High-to-Low Order by Revenue
- •Excel 2016 Sometimes Auto-Groups Daily Dates to Month
- •Group Daily Dates by Month in a Pivot Table
- •Create a Year-Over-Year Report
- •Group by Week in a Pivot Table
- •Limit a Pivot Report to Show Just the Top 5 Customers
- •Build a Better Top Five Using Groups
- •Build a Better Top Five with A Filter Hack
- •Build a Better Top 5 Using the Data Model
- •Limit a Report to Just One Region
- •Create an Ad-Hoc Reporting Tool
- •Create a Report for Every Customer
- •Create Pivot Charts
- •Add Visual Filters to a Pivot Table or Regular Table
- •Run Many Pivot Tables From one Slicer
- •Filter Dates Using a Timeline in Excel 2013 & Newer
- •Group Employees Into Age Bands
- •Create a Frequency Distribution
- •Grouping 1 Pivot Table Groups Them All
- •Reduce Size 50% Before Sending
- •Drag Fields to the Pivot Table
- •Create a Report That Shows Count, Min, Max, Average, Etc.
- •Better Calculations with Show Values As
- •Pivot Ranks Don’t Match RANK()
- •Calculated Fields in a Pivot Table
- •Add a Calculated Item to Group Items in a Pivot Table
- •Group Text Fields to Build Territories
- •Calculations Outside of Pivot Tables
- •Show Customer Account & Name
- •Show Months with Zero Sales
- •Create a Unique List of Customers with a Pivot Table
- •Use a Pivot Table to Compare Two Lists
- •Use a Pivot Table When There Is No Numeric Data
- •Fix Misspelled Customer Names
- •Create a Pivot Table from Access Data
- •What Happened to Multiple Consolidation Ranges in Pivot Tables?
- •What are the Products in Power BI And How Can I Get Them?
- •Know if You Have 32-Bit or 64-Bit Excel
- •Load and Clean Data with Power Query
- •Power Query is Easier to Learn than VBA Macros
- •I Have More than 1,048,576 Rows of Data
- •Load a List of File Names into Excel
- •Load a Folder of CSV Files into a Single Excel Worksheet
- •My Headings Repeat Every 60 Rows
- •Fill in Blanks with Values from Above
- •Use Power Query to Clean Data Already in Excel
- •Pivot from Multiple Tables in Excel 2013 Data Model
- •Reporting from the Smaller Side of the Relationship
- •Use Joiner Tables Between Tables
- •Five Reasons to Use Power Pivot
- •Why Isn’t Power Pivot Tab in the Ribbon?
- •Get Excel Data Into Power Pivot
- •Open the Power Pivot Window
- •Define Relationships Between Tables
- •Sort Month Name by Month Number
- •Create a Calendar Table
- •The Formulas are called DAX
- •Adding Calculations In the Power Pivot Grid
- •Refer to a Related Table in a Formula
- •Creating the Power Pivot Table
- •Building the Pivot Table
- •Feature X Won’t Work in Power Pivot
- •Replace Calculated Fields with DAX
- •Calculate() is Like SUMIFS()
- •Unapply a Filter Using DAX
- •Unfilter Using Time Intelligence
- •Convert Power Pivot to Formulas
- •January Actuals and February Plan
- •Power View Is Replaced with Power BI
- •Power BI Transforms Excel Data into Interactive Dashboards
- •First POwer BI Step: Get a Free Account for Power BI
- •Optional Step 1: Take the Sample Dashboards for a Spin
- •Use Q&A to Investigate Your Data
- •Click a Dashboard Element to Open the Underlying Report
- •Click in one Chart to Filter Other Charts
- •Enable Drill-Down Mode
- •Sorting is Hidden Behind More Options
- •Optional Step 2: Connect to an Existing Service
- •Download Power BI Desktop to Your Computer
- •Prepare Your Excel Data for Power BI
- •Add a Calendar Table
- •Three Icons in Power BI Desktop
- •In Power BI Desktop, the Power Query Tools Are Called Get Data
- •Load Your Excel Data to Power BI Desktop
- •In Power BI Desktop, the Power Pivot tools are called Modeling
- •Define Relationships in Power BI Desktop
- •Classify Your Geography Fields in Power BI Desktop
- •Prevent Power BI from Adding Up Year Fields
- •Sort This by That
- •Define Synonyms in Power BI Desktop
- •Hide Columns So They Can't Be Chosen
- •Three Ways to BUild Visualizations in a Report
- •FOrmatting a Chart
- •Add Lines using Analytics
- •Adding More Visualizations to a Page
- •It is Insanely Easy to Build a Hierarchy
- •Open Source Visualizations
- •Every Chart is a Slicer For Other Charts
- •A Report Can Have Multiple Pages
- •Using Maps in Power BI Desktop
- •Three Types of Filters
- •Where is the Top 10 Filter?
- •Add Titles, Logos, & Embelishments
- •Don't Forget to Save Your File!
- •Share Your Dashboard to Power BI in the Cloud
- •Use Quick Insights
- •View Your Report in a Browser
- •Q&A Works on Dashboards, Not Reports
- •Share a Dashboard With Your Manager
- •Wait a Second - a Sharing Link? Isn't this Dangerous?
- •Consume Your Dashboard Using Power BI Mobile
- •What Does All Of This Cost?
- •How Do I Update My Dashboard Every Day?
- •That's All For Power BI In This Book
- •Put a Pivot Table on a Map In Excel 2013 Power Map
- •Tricks for Navigating the Map in Power Map
- •Fine-Tuning Power Map
- •Creating a Video from Power Map
- •Use an Alternate Map for Power Map
- •Filtering in Power Map
- •Excel Data to Mailing Labels in Word
- •Excel 2013 Allows Slicers on Regular Tables
- •Use Power Query to Load Many Web Pages
- •Create a Chart with One Click
- •Teach Excel Your Favorite Chart
- •Move a Chart
- •Copy a Chart Detached from the Data
- •Add New Data to a Chart
- •Excel 2013 Offers Easy Chart Formatting
- •Begin Excel 2010 Formatting on Design
- •The Chart Layout Tab Is Missing in Excel 2013
- •Formatting Charts in Excel 2010 with Layout
- •Legend At the Top
- •The 2010 Format Dialog Box is a Task Pane in 2013
- •Display an Axis in Millions
- •Select Anything on a Chart to Format
- •The Format Dialog Box Offers a New Trick
- •Use Meaningful Chart Titles
- •Avoid 3-D Chart Types
- •Prevent the Drop to Zero
- •Explode One Slice of the Pie
- •Move Small Pie Slices To Second Chart
- •Add a Trendline to a Chart
- •See Detail on Large & Small Data Points
- •Chart Two Series with Differing Orders of Magnitude
- •Hide Subtotals From Chart in Excel 2013
- •Create Pivot Charts from Detail Data in Excel 2013
- •Use Formulas for Chart Labels in Excel 2013
- •Interactive Chart to Show One Customer
- •Tie the Chart Title to a Cell
- •Excel 2016 Adds a Waterfall Chart
- •Use an Invisible Series to Float Columns
- •Use Rogue Series for Shading
- •Two Stacked, One Clustered Column
- •Conditional Format a Chart
- •Scatter Charts are Versatile But Require a Different Workflow
- •When do I Use Which Chart Type?
- •Track Sales Leads with a Funnel Chart
- •Create Tiny Charts with Sparklines
- •Sparklines Are Not Scaled Together
- •What is the Win Loss Sparkline For?
- •Labeling Sparklines
- •Shade the Normal Range in a Sparkline
- •Convert a Table of Numbers to a Visualization
- •Control Values for Each Icon
- •Add Icons to Only the Good Cells
- •Use the SIGN Function for Up/Flat/Down Icon Set
- •Data Bars Options
- •Comparative Histogram
- •Select Every Kid in Lake Wobegon
- •There is a Font Optimized for Excel
- •Show Checkmarks in Excel
- •Add Bullets to Excel
- •Use the Border Tab in Format Cells
- •Remove Borders from Filled Cells
- •Double Underline a Grand Total
- •Why Did the Colors Change in Excel 2013?
- •Where Are My Excel 2003 Colors?
- •Transform Black-and-White Spreadsheets to Color by Using a Table
- •Fit a Slightly Too-Large Value in a Cell
- •Turn Off Wrap Text in Pasted Data
- •Delete All Pictures in Pasted Data
- •Prevent Long Text from Spilling
- •Show Two Values in a Split Cell
- •For Each Cell in Column A, Have Three Rows in Column B
- •Show Results as Fractions
- •Better Scientific Notation
- •Fill a Cell with Asterisks
- •I type 152 and get 1.52
- •Use Cell Styles to Change Formats
- •Move Columns by Sorting Left to Right
- •Move Columns Using Insert Cut Cells
- •Move Rows or Columns with Shift Drag
- •Select All Cells Using the Keyboard
- •Change the Width of All Columns with One Command
- •Copy Column Widths to a New Range
- •Copy Row Heights
- •Use White Text to Hide Data
- •Hide Values Using a Number Format
- •Hide and Unhide Data
- •Group Columns Instead of Hiding Them
- •Hide Error Cells When Printing
- •Unhide All Sheets
- •Very Hide a Worksheet
- •Organize Your Worksheet Tabs with Color
- •Copy Formatting to a New Range
- •Copy Without Changing Borders
- •Power Up Format Painter
- •Fill Formatting
- •Change All Red Font Cells to Blue Font
- •Replace Partially Bold Cells
- •Change the Look of Your Workbook with Document Themes
- •Create Your Own Theme
- •Bring Back the Office 2010 Colors And Shiny Objects
- •Change the Background of a Worksheet
- •Add a Printable Background to a Worksheet
- •Remove Hyperlinks Automatically Inserted by Excel
- •Select a Hyperlink Cell Without Following the Hyperlink
- •Pasted URLs Don’t Become Hyperlinks
- •Debug Using a Printed Spreadsheet
- •Change the Appearance of Cell Comments
- •Control How Your Name Appears in Comments
- •Force Some Comments to ALWAYS Be Visible to Provide a Help System
- •Change the Comment Shape to a Star
- •Add a Pop-up Picture of an Item in a Cell
- •Add a Pop-up Picture to Multiple Cells
- •Build Reports Where Columns in Each Section 1 Don’t Line Up
- •Paste a Live Picture of a Cell
- •Add Formatting to Pictures in Excel
- •Remove Picture Background
- •Inserting a Screen Clipping
- •Draw an Arrow to Visually Illustrate That Two Cells Are Connected
- •Add Connectors to Join Shapes
- •Circle a Cell on Your Worksheet
- •Draw Perfect Circles
- •Add Text to Any Closed Shape
- •Place Cell Contents in a Shape
- •Rotate a Shape
- •Create Dozens of Lightning Bolts
- •Make a Logo into a Shape
- •Draw Business Diagrams with Excel
- •Choose the Right Type of SmartArt
- •Use the Text Pane to Build SmartArt
- •Change a SmartArt Layout
- •Format SmartArt
- •Switch to the Format Tab to Format Individual Shapes
- •Use Cell Values as the Source for SmartArt Content
- •Add WordArt to a Worksheet
- •Chart and SmartArt Text Is Automatically WordArt
- •Excel 2013 Offers an Excel App Store
- •Add a Dropdown to a Cell
- •Configure Validation to “Ease up”
- •Use Validation to Prevent Duplicate Data Entry
- •Use Validation to Create Dependent Lists
- •Add a ToolTip to a Cell to Guide the Person Using the Workbook
- •Combine Validation with AutoComplete
- •Afterword
- •Index
122 |
POWER EXCEL WITH MR EXCEL |
|
|
Strategy: Upgrade to 64-bit Excel. Excel 2010-2016 can only use 2GB of the memory on your machine.
Adding memory beyond the 2GB that is already likely in your computer won’t help. When you convert to
64-bit Excel, Excel can use up to 8 Terabytes of memory.
Even if you have 64-bit Windows, the default is still for Excel to install as 32-bit. Here is how to check. Go to File, Account. Click About Microsoft Excel. Check the very top line of that dialog box. If your version number does not end in 64-bit, you are limited to 2 GB of memory usage.
Figure 303 98% of all Excel installations are not taking advantage of 64-bit.
Problem: Our company uses an ancient add-in that still is not compatible with 64-bit, so we are stuck with 32-bit.
Strategy: Read Charles Williams white paper on Formula Speed. This document has amazing ideas on how to be mindful of formula speed when building Excel formulas. The document is at http://mrx.cl/excelspeed. Charles also sells the Fast Excel V3 utility which will analyze your workbook for bottlenecks. For details: http://mrx.cl/2cxAaCt.
One concept in the article is moving a slow-calculating part of a formula out to a helper cell. If you have
1000 formulas that all divide by the same COUNTIF, you could move the COUNTIF to another cell and then have the 1000 formulas point to that one cell.
Another example is creating running totals. There are two choices here; use a formula of “add the cell above me to the cell to the left of me”, also represented in R1C1 by =R[-1]C+RC[-1]. The other formula is the ultra-cool =SUM(E$2:E2). This formula’s single dollar sign ensure that the range expands. Both pro- vide the same answer.
Figure 304 Both formulas provide the same answer.
Personally, I would always use the formula shown in Column D, because it is clever. In Charles’ article, he points out that Excel only has to look at two cells to calculate cell C15191. It has to look at 15,190 cells to calculate cell D15191. With over 15,000 cells in the data set, this difference is dramatic. To calculate all of column C requires Excel to look at 30 thousand cells. To calculate all of column D requires Excel to look at 115 million cells. Column C will calculate in a miniscule fraction of the time of column D. If your worksheet is getting slower, check out Charles William’s excellent article.
EXACT FORMULA COPY
Problem: I need to make an exact copy of a range of formulas. I do NOT want the cell references to change as I copy. Whoever set up the worksheet did not include dollar signs in the formulas. It is like I want to do a cut and paste, but keep the original formulas there.
PART 2: CALCULATING WITH EXCEL |
123 |
|
|
This is a common problem. If you copy and paste, the formula references will change. If you cut and paste, the formula references keep pointing at the same place. But, with a cut and paste, the original formulas are no longer there.
Strategy: Use Find and Replace to replace the leading equals sign with a word. This changes the formulas to text. Copy the text to the new location, then use Find and Replace to change the word back to an equals sign. You will now have two identical sets of formulae.
2
After doing that replace, you have text versions of the formulas. Copy the text to a new place.
Figure 305 Replace = with any word.
Use Find and Replace on both the original and copied range to change the word back to an equals sign
You have an exact copy of the original formulas..
Figure 306 Change the text back to formulas.
124 |
POWER EXCEL WITH MR EXCEL |
|
|
|
CALCULATE A LOAN PAYMENT |
Problem: I am considering buying a car. I want to calculate the loan payment.
Figure 307 Set up the price, term, and interest rate..
Strategy: To calculate your car loan payment, you can use the PMT function. Follow these steps:
1. Enter price, term in months, and annual percentage rate in cells A1:B3. The PMT function has three required arguments: the interest rate, the number of payments in the loan, and the original loan amount.
Gotcha: The interest rate must be entered as a percentage. If you are planning on monthly payments
(which is normal), you have to divide the annual percentage rate by 12.
Gotcha: In financial terms, the bank is loaning you $25,995—a positive amount coming to you. Thus, the payments that you make to the bank are really a negative amount—money leaving your wallet. For this reason, the result of the PMT function will be negative. However, you can precede the third argument of the PMT function with a minus sign in order to return a positive payment amount.
2. Enter the formula =PMT(B3/12,B2,-B1) in cell B5.
Figure 308 The PMT function calculates the monthly payment.
CALCULATE MANY SCENARIOS FOR LOAN PAYMENTS
Problem: I am considering buying a car. I used “Calculate a Loan Payment” to calculate a loan payment.
Now I want to do some what-if scenarios in order to see various options of increasing or decreasing the term or price. How can Excel help me with this?
Strategy: You follow the same setup described in “Calculate a Loan Payment.” Then you copy cells B1:B5 and plug in different numbers for the price and/or term.
Figure 309 Copy so that you can play what-if analyses.
This is an area where Excel shines. After you have entered the formulas for one loan model, you can easily copy and create many more loan models.
PART 2: CALCULATING WITH EXCEL |
|
125 |
|
|
|
|
BACK INTO AN ANSWER USING GOAL SEEK |
Problem: I’ve determined that I want to obtain a 60-month loan for a car. The interest rate is 5.25%. I want to find out what loan amount would result in a $425 monthly payment. Currently, the payment for a $25,995 car is too high at $493 as shown previously in Figure 308.
Strategy: Although you could use the PV function to calculate the price of the car, it is easier to use the
Goal Seek command:
1. Select Data, What-if Analysis, Goal Seek. This will bring up the Goal Seek dialog.
2. Indicate that you want to set cell B5 to $425 by changing cell B1.
2
Figure 310 Back into an answer.
In a simple case like this one, Goal Seek will almost always succeed. Excel considers different input values until it finds your solution. Within a second, it will report back that it found the correct input cell value.
Figure 311 Excel finds the price to yield the desired payment.
3. To accept the solution, click OK. To revert to the original value, click Cancel.
Results: Thanks to Goal Seek, you find that you can afford to borrow $22,384.93.
Additional Details: The formulas are still live after you use Goal Seek. You can continue to change terms, rates, and prices to calculate new payments.
Gotcha: When there is not a linear relationship between the two cells, Goal Seek may fail to find a solu- tion.
CREATE AN AMORTIZATION TABLE
Problem: I know it is easy to figure out a monthly payment using PMT. I would like to see my loan bal- ance after each month’s payment. How can I build an amortization table?
Strategy: You can use PPMT and IPMT to build this amortization table. Here’s how:
1. In a blank section of the worksheet, add the column headings Payment, Date, Principal, Interest, and Balance.
126 |
POWER EXCEL WITH MR EXCEL |
|
|
2.Ensure that the formula for Balance in the first row points to the price in B1.
3.In the next row of the table, enter the number 1 for Payment. Ctrl+drag the fill handle to fill in the proper number of payments.
4.Enter the first payment date for the Date. Right-click+drag the fill handle to the last row. When you release the mouse button, choose Fill Months.
5.Enter the PPMT function, using the proper absolute references, so that you can copy the function to column D to be used for IPMT. The syntax is =PPMT(rate, per, nper, pv, [fv], [type]). The only differ- ence from the PMT function is the addition of the period number as the second argument. In C8, type
=PPMT(. The rate is B3/12, but after clicking on B3, press the F4 key to add the dollar signs. Type /12 and a comma. Click on the first payment number. Press the F4 key three times so that a dollar sign appears before the column number. Type a comma. Click on the Term in B2 and press F4. Type a comma. Type a minus sign and click on the price in B1. Press F4 and type the closing parenthesis.
The whole formula is =PPMT($B$3/12,$A8,$B$2,-$B$1).
Figure 312 Calculate the principal payment.
6. Copy this formula to the Interest Payment column. Edit the formula and change PPMT to IPMT.
Use the F2 key or double click the cell in order to edit the formula. Alternatively, select the cell. Use the mouse to select the first P in PPMT in the formula bar. Type an I to change to IPMT.
7. For the Balance formula, use the previous balance minus this month’s principal payment.
8. Select the three cells that contain the principal, interest, and balance calculations. Double-click the fill handle to copy the formulas for all months.
Figure 313 The ending balance should be within a penny of zero.
Additional Details: To test that the table is correct, scroll to the last row. You should see that the balance reaches zero with the last payment.
Alternate Strategy: Anytime that you have to enter the numbers 1 to nn for a formula, there is a cool alternative. Instead of putting the formulas in the worksheet, use ROW(A1) where the 1 needs to go. When you copy the formula down, it will change to ROW(A2) which will return a 2, and so on.