A comment can be added to any cell. It can be used to give additional information about the cell and its contents. To enter a comment, press the Shift-F2 key combination or right click on the cell and choose Insert Comment. After a comment has been put in, you will see a red triangle in the top right corner of the cell. To see a comment, just put the cursor over the cell.
A red triangle in the top right corner of the cell.
You can use the Roundup function as follows: =ROUNDUP(0.08,0) or if the 0.08 is in a cell, say B2 then: =ROUNDUP(B2,0)
Say the values you were testing were in B2 and C2, then the formula could be:=IF(C2
Microsoft Excel doesn't have an invention date per-say. It was sold to them by another company under a different name Microsoft released it under a different name and with major improvement in 1987.
Search torrents. Is all i can say
Yes it can. Say you have you values listed from cell A2 to A20, then in B2 you could enter the following formula and copy it down and it would get your moving average: =AVERAGE(A2:A$2)
There are many ways of doing that in Excel. 50% is half, so it is the same as dividing it by 2. It is also the same as multiplying it by a half. Assuming you have a total in a cell, lets say cell A2, then these are some of the formulas you could use to find 50 percent of the value in A2: =A2 * 50% =A2 / 2 =A2 * 0.5
percent say cell A30 is 25 then =A30% would get you 0.25
How do you say...? = Comment dit-on...? comment vous dites
Basically, what I'm trying to say is that pray. pray soo hard that columns come. I have personal experience.
You can concatenate using the & operator. So say you have a firstname of a person in cell B2 and their surname in cell C2 and in D2 you want to display their first name, a space and their surname together, you would do this: =B2 & " " & C2 You could also use the CONCATENATE function to do the same thing: =CONCATENATE(B2," ",C2)
Put the 125000 into one cell, say cell A2. Put 11.5% into another cell, say cell B2. Then in another cell you could have this formula: =A2*B2 That is the proper way to do it, but you could do it lots of other ways.
Access is a database. Excel is a spreadsheet. Both are useful to displaying data systematically, but a database is enormously more flexible. Access is a relational database, which is even more flexible than an ordinary database and permits the data to be manipulated in many ways. +++ It's not "instead of" but "both" - using whichever is the better for the given work. ' It does depend on your purposes. Excel is by far the better if you need only a single table, or if you need to embed a lot of mathematical formulae in the spread-sheet - though MS has ruined what had been its nearly-good graph routines. A database table looks like a spread-sheet page, but it lacks the rapid copying functions that are valuable features in Excel.