Creating A Worksheet and An Embedded Chart
Creating A Worksheet and An Embedded Chart
Command Tabs
Name Box
Located below the ribbon at the left end of the
formula bar. When a user types a cell location into
this box and presses Enter, the insertion point moves
to that cell.
Home Tab
Quick Access Toolbar
A toolbar that gives you fast and easy access to the
tools you use most often in Excel.
Screen Tips
Small, onscreen rectangles that display descriptive
text when you rest the pointer on a command or
control.
Home Tab is..
Called the Primary tab
Contains groups with the more frequently used
commands.
The active tab is the tab currently displayed.
Dialog box Launcher
When click displays a dialog box or a task pane.
Dialog Box
Contains
additional
commands and
options for the
group.
Task Pane
Is a window that has
more commands and
can stay open while you
work on the worksheet.
Formula Bar
Appears below the Ribbon
You can make bigger by dragging the sizing handle or
clicking the expand button.
Splitting the Window
When a worksheet contains a lot of data, you can see
only a small portion of the worksheet in Excel’s Normal
and page Layout views.
The Split command enables to view the worksheet in two
panes or four quadrants.
The Split command lets you use the scroll bars on the
right and at the bottom of the window to display
different sections of the worksheet at the same time so
you can compare or contrast data or see what effect a
change in one part of the worksheet might have on a
distant part of the worksheet.
Working with an Existing Workbook
Many workbooks require frequent updating because
existing data has changed or new data must be added.
Workers frequently open an existing workbook,
update information, and then save the workbook to
be revised later.
Filenames should reflect the type of data contained in
the file and be descriptive so you can locate and
retrieve files quickly.
Filenames can be up to 255 characters long, including
the filename extension.
Most people use short descriptive filenames that
clearly identify the content of the workbook.
Selecting a Cell
To enter data into a cell, you first must select it.
Easiest way to select a cell (make it active) is to use
the mouse and click.
Use the arrow keys to move around the spreadsheet.
Entering Text
In Excel, any set of characters containing a letter,
hyphen (as in a phone number) or space is considered
text.
Text is used to:
Place worksheet titles, column titles, and row titles on
the worksheet.
Alignment of Text
Excel left-aligns text in a cell.
Left-aligned means the cell entry is positioned at the
far left in the cell.
When text is longer than the width of a column, Excel
shows the overflow characters in adjacent cells to the
right as long as these adjacent cells contain no data.
Functions/Formulas
AUTOSUM--a function used to add a column or row
of numbers.
AVERAGE—function used to add a series of numbers
and then divide by the number in that series.
MAX—function used to determine or identify the
largest number in a group of selected number.
MIN—function to identify the smallest number.
Fill Handle
Printing the Worksheet
Use print preview
Turn on gridlines—I want them to show
Create a header for the class
Print in landscape
Values Version of Worksheet
Shows the results of the formulas you have entered
Doesn’t show actual formulas used.
Formulas Version
Shows the actual formula you have entered
Press CTRL + ACCENT MARK (` )
Useful for debugging a worksheet.
Questions?