No. Spreadsheet programs do not control or interact directly with the hardware (some DOS ones may have had their own printer drivers). They also do not provide an API for other applications to run on top of them.
No. It is an application software.
It is a spreadsheet program.
If you opened a spreadsheet, you will be running a software program. If you use Microsoft Windows, it will probably be Excel.
If you opened a spreadsheet, you will be running a software program. If you use Microsoft Windows, it will probably be Excel.
System software is the software that runs the computer (a basic example is the operating system). Application software is the various programs that can be downloaded, installed, and used to run a program, for example: Text processor, spreadsheet, Video editor, and so on.
If you opened a spreadsheet, you will be running a software program. If you use MicroSoft Windows, it will probably be Excel.
Apple's Numbers software is the spreadsheet component of their iWork suite.
Microsoft does sell a spreadsheet software programs. The program is called Microsoft Excel. There are turtorials that are included with the program to help the consumer become successful in using it.
No, it isn't. Its a spreadsheet software.
If you opened a spreadsheet, you will be running a software program. If you use Microsoft Windows, it will probably be Excel.
A spreadsheet is software.
A spread sheet program, such as Micosoft Excel or Lotus 123, is a pre-developed and pre-tested software program that allows a user who knows how to use the program to produce an output, commonly referred to as a spread sheet. The producer is the program and its output is a spreadsheet.