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In Excel 2007, on the Data ribbon tab, click on What-If Analysis in the Data Tools group, and select Goal Seek. In older versions of Excel it is on the Tools menu.
to see another tools uses
to see another tools uses
In excel 2010 it can be found in the data tab > data tools > what if analysis > goal seek
The tools menu for Safari can be found under preferences. You can also hit the command button to access the tools menu.
It puts in: &[Date]
They are known as dependent cells and you can get the arrows by using the Formula Auditing tools.
You can do it by creating macros and then editing the macros. The macros or set of code can be applied to a button. It will depend on the version of Excel you have, but you can usually start creating macros or writing code through the Tools menu.
It works basicly the same way in both versions, but the commands are in different locations. The command is on the Formulas ribbon in Excel 2007 and the Tools - Formula Auditing menu in Excel 97-2003. See related links for an animated tutor of how to use trace precedents.
In Excel 2003, you enable AutoSave by following these steps:Choose Options from the Tools menu. Excel displays the Options dialog box.Make sure the Save tab is selected.Use the controls on the tab to indicate how you want the saving to occur.Click on OK.
To view function names in a DLL from the command line, you can use the dumpbin tool that comes with Visual Studio. The command is dumpbin /EXPORTS yourfile.dll, which will list all exported functions. Alternatively, you can use tools like Dependency Walker or pexpect if you prefer a graphical interface or different command-line utilities.
The tools button is the settings icon. It contains the tools option inside it.