Cart
Free US shipping over $10
Proud to be B-Corp

101 Excel 2013 Tips, Tricks and Timesavers J Walkenbach

101 Excel 2013 Tips, Tricks and Timesavers By J Walkenbach

101 Excel 2013 Tips, Tricks and Timesavers by J Walkenbach


$10.00
Condition - Very Good
Only 2 left

Summary

Get the most out of Excel 2013 with this exceptional advice from Mr. Spreadsheet himself! Excel 2013 is excellent, but there's lots to learn to truly excel at Excel! In this latest addition to his popular Mr. Spreadsheet's Bookshelf series, John Walkenbach, aka Mr.

101 Excel 2013 Tips, Tricks and Timesavers Summary

101 Excel 2013 Tips, Tricks and Timesavers by J Walkenbach

Get the most out of Excel 2013 with this exceptional advice from Mr. Spreadsheet himself! Excel 2013 is excellent, but there's lots to learn to truly excel at Excel! In this latest addition to his popular Mr. Spreadsheet's Bookshelf series, John Walkenbach, aka Mr. Spreadsheet, shares new and exciting ways to accomplish and master all of your spreadsheet tasks. From taming the Ribbon bar to testing and tables, creating custom functions, and overcoming impossible charts, mixing nesting limits, and more, 101 Excel 2013 Tips, Tricks, & Timesavers will save you time and help you avoid common spreadsheet stumbling blocks. * Reveals ways to maximize the power of Excel to create robust applications * Draws on John Walkenbach's years of experience using Excel and writing more than 50 books * Shares tips and tricks for dealing with function arguments, creating add-ins, using UserForms, working with dynamic chart data, and changing data entry orientation * Provides shortcuts and helpful techniques for sorting more than three columns, entering fake data for testing purposes, and setting up powerful pivot tables 101 Excel 2013 Tips, Tricks, & Timesavers is packed with information that you need to know in order to confidently and seamlessly master the challenges that come with using Excel!

About J Walkenbach

John Walkenbach, arguably the foremost authority on Excel, has written 50+ books, including the bestselling Excel Bible, Excel Formulas, and Excel Power Programming with VBA, as well as more than 300 articles for publications such as PC World, InfoWorld, and Windows. He created the award-winning Power Utility Pak, and provides Excel information and insight at www.spreadsheetpage.com.

Table of Contents

Introduction 1 What You Should Know 1 What You Should Have 1 Conventions in This Book 2 Formula listings 2 Key names 2 The Ribbon 2 Functions, procedures, and named ranges 3 Mouse conventions 3 What the icons mean 3 How This Book Is Organized 4 How to Use This Book 4 About the Power Utility Pak Offer 4 Part I: Workbooks and Files Tip 1: Changing the Look of Excel 7 Tip 2: Customizing the Quick Access Toolbar 10 Tip 3: Customizing the Ribbon 14 Tip 4: Understanding Protected View 17 Tip 5: Understanding AutoRecover 20 Tip 6: Using a Workbook in a Browser 22 Tip 7: Saving to a Read-Only Format 24 Tip 8: Generating a List of Filenames 27 Tip 9: Generating a List of Sheet Names 29 Tip 10: Using Document Themes 32 Tip 11: Understanding Excel Compatibility Issues 37 Tip 12: Where to Change Printer Settings 39 Part II: Formatting Tip 13: Working with Merged Cells 43 Tip 14: Indenting Cell Contents 48 Tip 15: Using Named Styles 50 Tip 16: Creating Custom Number Formats 54 Tip 17: Using Custom Number Formats to Scale Values 58 Tip 18: Creating a Bulleted List 60 Tip 19: Shading Alternate Rows Using Conditional Formatting 62 Tip 20: Formatting Individual Characters in a Cell 65 Tip 21: Using the Format Painter 66 Tip 22: Inserting a Watermark 68 Tip 23: Showing Text and a Value in a Cell 70 Tip 24: Avoiding Font Substitution for Small Point Sizes 72 Tip 25: Updating Old Fonts 75 Part III: Formulas Tip 26: Resizing the Formula Bar 81 Tip 27: Monitoring Formula Cells from Any Location 83 Tip 28: Learning Some AutoSum Tricks 85 Tip 29: Knowing When to Use Absolute and Mixed References 87 Tip 30: Avoiding Error Displays in Formulas 90 Tip 31: Creating Worksheet-Level Names 92 Tip 32: Using Named Constants 94 Tip 33: Sending Personalized E-Mail from Excel 96 Tip 34: Looking Up an Exact Value 99 Tip 35: Performing a Two-Way Lookup 101 Tip 36: Performing a Two-Column Lookup 103 Tip 37: Calculating Holidays 105 Tip 38: Calculating a Person s Age 108 Tip 39: Working with Pre-1900 Dates 110 Tip 40: Displaying a Live Calendar in a Range 114 Tip 41: Returning the Last Nonblank Cell in a Column or Row 116 Tip 42: Various Methods of Rounding Numbers 118 Tip 43: Converting Between Measurement Systems 121 Tip 44: Counting Nonduplicated Entries in a Range 123 Tip 45: Using the AGGREGATE Function 125 Tip 46: Making an Exact Copy of a Range of Formulas 128 Tip 47: Using the Background Error-Checking Features 130 Tip 48: Using the Inquire Add-In 132 Tip 49: Hiding and Locking Your Formulas 135 Tip 50: Using the INDIRECT Function 138 Tip 51: Formula Editing in Dialog Boxes 141 Tip 52: Converting a Vertical Range to a Table 142 Part IV: Working with Data Tip 53: Selecting Cells Efficiently 147 Tip 54: Automatically Filling a Range with a Series 151 Tip 55: Fixing Trailing Minus Signs 154 Tip 56: Restricting Cursor Movement to Input Cells 155 Tip 57: Transforming Data with and Without Using Formulas 157 Tip 58: Creating a Drop-Down List in a Cell 160 Tip 59: Comparing Two Ranges by Using Conditional Formatting 162 Tip 60: Finding Duplicates by Using Conditional Formatting 165 Tip 61: Working with Credit Card Numbers 168 Tip 62: Identifying Excess Spaces 170 Tip 63: Transposing a Range 173 Tip 64: Using Flash Fill to Extract Data 176 Tip 65: Using Flash Fill to Combine Data 179 Tip 66: Inserting Stock Information 181 Tip 67: Getting Data from a Web Page 184 Tip 68: Importing a Text File into a Worksheet Range 188 Tip 69: Using the Quick Analysis Feature 190 Tip 70: Filling the Gaps in a Report 192 Tip 71: Performing Inexact Searches 194 Tip 72: Proofing Your Data with Audio 196 Tip 73: Getting Data from a PDF File 198 Part V: Tables and Pivot Tables Tip 74: Understanding Tables 205 Tip 75: Using Formulas with a Table 208 Tip 76: Numbering Table Rows Automatically 212 Tip 77: Identifying Data Appropriate for a Pivot Table 214 Tip 78: Using a Pivot Table Instead of Formulas 218 Tip 79: Controlling References to Cells Within a Pivot Table 222 Tip 80: Creating a Quick Frequency Tabulation 224 Tip 81: Grouping Items by Date in a Pivot Table 227 Tip 82: Creating Pivot Tables with Multiple Groupings 230 Tip 83: Using Pivot Table Slicers and Timelines 232 Part VI: Charts and Graphics Tip 84: Understanding Recommended Charts 239 Tip 85: Customizing Charts 241 Tip 86: Making Charts the Same Size 243 Tip 87: Creating a Chart Template 245 Tip 88: Creating a Combination Chart 247 Tip 89: Handling Missing Data in a Chart 250 Tip 90: Using High-Low Lines in a Chart 252 Tip 91: Using Multi-Level Category Labels 253 Tip 92: Linking Chart Text to Cells 255 Tip 93: Freezing a Chart 257 Tip 94: Creating a Chart Directly in a Range 260 Tip 95: Creating Minimalistic Charts 264 Tip 96: Applying Chart Data Labels from a Range 268 Tip 97: Grouping Charts and Other Objects 270 Tip 98: Taking Pictures of Ranges 273 Tip 99: Changing the Look of Cell Comments 276 Tip 100: Enhancing Images 279 Tip 101: Saving Shapes, Charts, and Ranges as Images 281 Index 283

Additional information

GOR008576955
9781118642184
111864218X
101 Excel 2013 Tips, Tricks and Timesavers by J Walkenbach
Used - Very Good
Paperback
John Wiley & Sons Inc
2013-07-16
320
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - 101 Excel 2013 Tips, Tricks and Timesavers