An Excel worksheet is a grid, so effectively a table. Any part of it can be used as a table. There are also specialised kinds of tables in Excel, like Pivot tables and one way and two way Data tables. There are also specialised table functions. So in many ways, tables are a major part of Excel.
Yes they would be a significant part of Excel. A worksheet is a grid, so it is a kind of table. Data is usually laid out like a table. There are special functions for dealing with tables. Tables are used in databases, so they are more key to databases and a more clearly defined element of databases, but they are important in Excel too.
bullets
You can link excel tables, text files, access tables, ODBC tables
You can copy a table in Excel and paste it into Word. You will lose any formulas, but the resulting values will be retained. You can also link a Word document to a table in Excel, which will allow changes in the Excel table to be maintained in the Word document.
Use Microsoft Excel.
Here is a video tutorial http://www.videojug.com/film/how-to-create-tables-in-excel on how to make a table in Excel.
tables and asking if u vanna fart lol
It can calculate numbers and set out tables and graphs
It is in the Tables group on the Insert tab of the ribbon.
No. That is a feature of Microsoft Word tables, but not Excel. There are specific options for inserting rows and columns in Excel.
Yes, you can add just about as many tables as you like. Recommend you separate the tables with an empty column to make the tables easier to identify.
They are all in the file along with the tables and other elements, as part of the database.They are all in the file along with the tables and other elements, as part of the database.They are all in the file along with the tables and other elements, as part of the database.They are all in the file along with the tables and other elements, as part of the database.They are all in the file along with the tables and other elements, as part of the database.They are all in the file along with the tables and other elements, as part of the database.They are all in the file along with the tables and other elements, as part of the database.They are all in the file along with the tables and other elements, as part of the database.They are all in the file along with the tables and other elements, as part of the database.They are all in the file along with the tables and other elements, as part of the database.They are all in the file along with the tables and other elements, as part of the database.
There are varous answers to that in Excel, such as what-if tables, pivot tables, the scenario manager and many other things. Overall Excel itself could be said to maniulate and analyse data. The same could also be said of a database.