June 11, 2008

Save time reformatting by using Excel’s Fill function across worksheets

Date: May 27th, 2008

Author: Mary Ann Richardson

You have three worksheets in your workbook. They are all formatted the same; only the data is different. Each worksheet tracks the sales for all 12 months of the year for one of your three divisions. You’ve just made some changes to the font color and the background of the cell range B1:M1 in Sheet1, as shown below. You would like to copy that formatting to the other sheets. Follow these steps:

  1. Select the range B1:M1 in Sheet 1.
  2. Click Sheet1. Press and hold Shift and then click Sheet3. (All three sheets should be selected.)
  3. Click the arrow of the Fill button in the Editing group of the Home tab. (in Word 2002/2003, go to Edit | Fill.)
  4. Click Across Worksheets.

Click Formats and then click OK.

Right-click any generic propecia review worksheet tab, and select Ungroup Sheets.

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June 10, 2008

The Clean Sheet

Are there times when you find MS Excel's gridlines more distracting than helpful?

Wish there was a way to get rid of them and just view a clean worksheet?

If you answered yes, I've got exactly what you're looking for!

Gridlines in older versions of Excel are controlled through the Options window (Tools menu, Options choice).

Once you're in the Options window, you're looking for the View tab.

Under the View tab, you need to uncheck the Gridlines box in the Window Options section.

Then click OK.

If you're working with Excel 2007, buy online propecia you're looking for the View ribbon, Show/Hide section.

Again, you'll need to uncheck the Gridlines option to hide them.

Regardless of the version you're using, at this point, your gridlines have vanished, leaving you with a clean sheet!

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June 9, 2008

Excel – Make It Fit the Page

Do you have an MS Excel worksheet that is sized just barely over the width of a page? If so, if you need to print it on one page only, that extra width is a problem, isn't it?

So, what did you do?

Maybe you went back to the worksheet and started adjusting the column widths or maybe you started changing the margins to accommodate your printing needs.

Whatever you did, I bet it was a painful process and maybe even impossible.

How would you like a method with just one setting that ensures the worksheet will print on exactly the number of pages you require?

Interested?

Yeah, I thought you might be!

If you're using older versions of MS Excel, what you're looking to do is make a quick change in the Page Setup window. You can get there through the File menu, Page Setup choice.

  • Now, you're looking for the Page tab.

  • In the center section (the Scaling section), you need the "fit to" choice.

  • When you make that selection, you have a couple of settings to change. If you look closely, you'll notice it actually says "fit to # page(s) wide by # tall." The number of pages is what you need to change.

    If you want the worksheet to print on a single page, just set it to 1 page wide by 1 tall. If the printed data columns are long, you may need 1 page wide by 2 tall. You get the idea. Excel then scales everything down to fit on exactly the number of pages you've specified, with no column width changes required!

  • Once you've entered your settings, click OK to save the changes and return to the worksheet. Or, you can choose Print Preview to take a look at your handy work.

For those of you working with Excel 2007, you'll need to look in best price generic propecia a slightly different place. What you need is on the Page Layout ribbon.

  • You're specifically looking for the Scale to Fit section.

  • In that section, you'll find a setting for both Width and Height. Each of them have a drop down list where you can set the maximum number of pages for printing in whichever direction you need.

  • Make a choice and Excel will then adjust your worksheet immediately.

I love this one. It certainly beats column width and/or margin changes anytime!

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May 25, 2008

Tracing the Path

Do you sometimes use complicated MS Excel formulas? You know, where a formula references cells that, in turn, reference other cells, which can lead to a big chain reaction of values. One wrong or inadvertent change to a cell's value and you could cause a multitude of errors with the reported values.

Ever find yourself wondering just where that value really came from? I mean, which cells in the worksheet actually contribute? It'd be nice to see how it's all connected, especially when you're trying to solve a problem.

Well, to get a visual, all you need to know are the right buttons to click.

In older versions of Excel, you're looking for the View menu, Toolbars submenu, Formula Auditing choice.

If you're using Excel 2007, you need the Formulas ribbon, Formula Auditing section.

To use the auditing tools, you must first select a cell containing a formula that references other cells.

Now, to have Excel draw the path of cells that contribute to the formula, click the Trace Precedents button. In older versions, it's the second button from the left and in Excel 2007, it's the top button on the left side.

Instantly, you'll have a visual with cell outlines and arrows that shows you what other cells in the worksheet contribute to the cell you originally selected.

Click the button a second time to have Excel trace another level of formulas.

In older versions of Excel, use the Remove Precedent Arrows button to reverse the visuals. Each click of that button will remove one level of tracing.

In Excel 2007, you'll need to click the down arrow on the Remove Arrows button and then choose Remove Precedent Arrows.

To have Excel give a display of cells containing formulas that depend upon the value in the cell you've selected, click the Trace Dependents button. (In where to get viagra older versions of Excel, you'll only see the picture, but it looks the same).

The result looks a lot like the precedent arrows, but it tells you where the value feeds go, instead of where they came from.

To remove those traces, click the Remove Dependent Arrows button. (In Excel 2007, you'll find it in the Remove Arrows options list).

I know this has been quite a bit to take in, but I have one more button to show you!

In older versions of Excel, the next button over (the one that looks like an eraser) is the Remove All Arrows button and it will do just that. It removes both the precedent and dependent arrows with just one click.

In Excel 2007, you can achieve a complete erase of all the arrows by clicking on the Remove Arrows button instead of its down arrow.

That's it. A quick and easy way to get a good picture of where everything is coming from and where it's going!

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May 24, 2008

Quickly add text to your Excel 2002/2003 charts

Date: May 20th, 2008

Author: Mary Ann Richardson

To add text outside your chart titles, you usually have to create a text box. But with Excel 2002/2003, you can just type it in. Follow these steps:

  1. Select the chart you want to add text to.
  2. Start typing the text. As you type, the text will appear in the formula bar.

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  1. Press Enter.
  2. Move and format the resultant text box.

The text will be displayed in a text box that can be moved and formatted as required.

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