Using AUTOFILL To Make Copying Easy!
Excel provides a very powerful and quick way of copying formulas and text. This is called AUTOFILL.
You know when you can perform an AUTOFILL because the cursor changes to a as you move it over the tiny black box at bottom right corner of the selected cell, as pictured here.
Autofill To Copy Text & Numbers
Select the cell to copy Click & Drag with the mouse to do this
Move the mouse to the bottom-right corner Your cursor will change to a small plus sign (pictured above)
Click and drag to highlight where to copy to
Release the mouse button The text will be copied and adjusted if necessary.
Excel will actually do something clever if you copy the word Jan. to other cells. It will work out that you are creating a series of months and will fill in Feb., March, April, automatically for you. Try it and see what happens.
Autofill with More Than One Cell
Highlight two cells in a series (such as dates a week apart) and Autofill will continue that series:
Creating Your Own AutoFill Lists
You can create a custom fill series:
Click on the Tools Menu, then options
Click on the Custom List Tab
Select New List in the Custom lists box
Type the Entries in the list entries box, beginning with the first entry
Press Enter after each entry
Click on Add When Finished
Click OK
AutoFill To Copy Formulas
Select the cell to copy Click & Drag with the mouse to do this
Move the mouse over the bottom-right corner Your cursor will change to a small plus sign (pictured above)
Click and drag to highlight where to copy to
Release the mouse button The formulas will be copied and adjusted automatically.
AutoFill With The Right Mouse Button
Instead of dragging the AutoFill handle with the left mouse button you can use the right mouse button. When you let go you will be presented with a menu of options that you can pick from (such as creating growth trends)
Erasing Cells Erasing The Contents Of Cells
You can blank the contents of any cell:
Select Cell(s) to be blanked
Press Delete on the keyboard
Erasing The Formats From A Cell Or Range Of Cells
Select Cell(s) to be blanked
Click on Edit Menu The menu will drop down
Click on Delete
Click on Formats
Undo
If you make a mistake and change a cell you didn't mean to - or accidentally delete a whole range of cells - Excel has a really useful way of undoing any damage.
Click on the Undo button Or CTRL + Z, or Edit Menu : Undo
Getting Excel To Do Your Calculations!
The power of worksheets comes from the ability to set up formulas in cells, and to re-calculate when figures change.
Start A Formula With The Equals Sign
You should always start a formula in Excel with the equals sign so that Excel knows it is a formula and not just text to be displayed
Select the cell where the result of the formula is to appear
Type =
Enter formula It appears in the formula bar and the result in the cell.
Press Return Or click on the tick
Entering A Formula By Pointing
You don't need to write in the cell references. Simply point to them instead.
Select Cell where result of calculation is to appear
= Type =
Click on first cell.
+ Type +
Click on next cell
Press Return Or click on the tick
Pointing can be used on all formulas instead of typing them in.
Arithmetic Symbols
+ Addition
- Subtraction
* Multiplication
/ Division
^ Exponent
% Percentage
Precedence of Calculation
Calculations are not simply done form left to right. Below is the order in which all calculations are performed.
Priority
|
Symbol
|
Explanation
|
1
|
()
|
Anything in brackets is done before anything outside the brackets is even considered
|
2
|
^
|
Raises a number by an order of magnitude: raises it to the power of something else
e.g. X2
|
3
|
* /
|
Multiply and divide are on the same level. Whichever is furthest left in a formula is therefore done first.
|
4
|
+ -
|
Plus and minus are on the same level as above.
|
The acronym for this is BODMAS
Brackets Order Divide Multiply Add Subtract
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