You may be referring to the Fill Handle, but there are many ways that you can copy formulas in Excel. You can do it through the menus, with the mouse, with the keyboard, with the shorcut menus, with function keys and with combinations of these options. With the keyboard alone, there are various ways you can copy formulas.
The fill-handle is a powerful tool in Excel. It can be used to copy formulas or finish a text series.
A fill handle can copy anything and in different ways. It can copy contents and it can copy formulas and it can create fill series.
Copy and Special Paste formulas.
Not really. Just copy and paste or just paste formulas.
There are thousands of formulas and more than a hundred functions used in Excel.
You can copy a table in Excel and paste it into Word. You will lose any formulas, but the resulting values will be retained. You can also link a Word document to a table in Excel, which will allow changes in the Excel table to be maintained in the Word document.
Formulas that work in Excel 2010 will work in any of the older versions of Excel. The main difference from 2007 onwards is the way Excel looks. Fundamentals like how standard formulas are used never changes. It is still a spreadsheet. If they cannot do those standard things then they are not really spreadsheets.
Functions are basically built-in formulas in Excel. They are used extensively in Excel, so it is very important to know how to use them.
Ctrl C is used for copy in Excel, as it is in other applications.
Use the Paste Special facility. From there you can then choose to paste the values, rather than the formulas.
There is no copy area in Excel, but Windows has a clipboard where you can copy stuff.
Select the data in Excel and then use one of the copy methods, like Ctrl-C or using the copy command from the shortcut menu or the Edit menu or the Main ribbon. then go to the Word document and do a Paste. The data will appear in a Word table. You will lose the formulas and just get the data values and the results of the formulas.