What is a reference that instructs coders to look up another term to locate a code for a particular condition?
The cell reference will maintain itself if it is an absolute cell reference. This is being done by having two dollar signs, one before the cell column and one before the cell row, like this: $F$3
There is no particular name in full, except we do talk about part of it being a sheet reference. So you have a sheet reference and a cell reference together. To do the reference you need the sheet name, followed by an exclamation mark, followed by the cell. The following refers to cell C3 on Sheet2: =Sheet2!C3
an express condition to payment, (ii) that the promise or order is subject to or governed by another record, or (iii) that rights or obligations with respect to the promise or order are stated in another record. A reference to another record does not of itself make the promise or order conditional. ii) because payment is limited to resort to a particular fund or source.
If you have one reference that leads to another and then another which finally comes back to the first, making a circle or closed loop, this is a circular reference.
What is coding? What could include in a person’s frame of reference? Give examples
It is then called another condition!
In spreadsheet applications, a reference to a particular cell or group of cells that does not change, even if you change the shape or size of the spreadsheet, or copy the reference to another cell. For example, in Lotus 1-2-3 and other spreadsheet programs, the cell reference "$A$3" is an absolute cell reference that always points to the cell in the first column and third row. In contrast, the reference "A3" is a relative cell reference that initially points to the cell in the first column and third row, but may change if you copy the reference to another cell or change the shape and size of the spreadsheet in some other way. Absolute cell references are particularly useful for referencing constant values (i.e., values that never change).
You need to enclose the workbook name in square brackets, then specify the sheet in that workbook and then the particular cell. So if you wanted to refer to cell A10 on Sheet2 of a workbook called Sales.xls then the reference would be like this: =[Sales.xls]Sheet2!A10
In answer to your message
Cell address
specific
A relative reference.