That is the reference for the cell at Column B, Row 1.
B1 is a relative reference.
=b1^c1
In Excel, B1 is a cell address where column B and row 1 meet.
For =A1+B1, the operator is the plus sign (+).
"=((B1-A1)/B1)*100" alternatively if you format the cell as a %, it would just be "=(b1-a1)/b1"
You could use either of the following, by putting the formulas in any cells except A1 and B1: =A1+B1 =SUM(A1:B1)
MAX. If you had a series of numbers in the range B1:B84 the following formula would show the largest of them: =MAX(B1:B84).
The equals sign. =SUM(B1:B7)
The proper way is: =SUM(A1:B1) Though you would hardly ever see any of them, it could also be done in these ways: =SUM(A1,B1) =SUM(A1+B1)
If you have a value in, for instance, cell A1 then if, for instance, you put =A1 in cell B1 then cell B1 will now contain a duplicate of cell A1.
=(A1/B1)*100 then press Ctrl + Shift + % and the cell will be displayed as a percent
b1 code on 2008 acura RL