Word normally hosts data from Excel. It can display charts that are linked from Excel and will show data from Excel in tables in Word. A Paste Link can be set up, so that if the data changed in the Excel document, it will also change in the Word document.
The most obvious example would be embedding a piece of an Excel spreadsheet in a Word document, like a table or chart of sales figures or other data that might be put into a proposal or sales letter.
Store data in Access.Export some of that data to Excel.Use Excel to perform advanced calculations with the data.Import the results of the Excel analyses back into Access.
A Word doc with a linked spreadsheet is usually called a 'Compound Document'.
Usually a table, but it depends on what you copy.
You do not really import data from Word, but you can cut and paste from Word to Excel. If you like, you can embed the word document in an Excel worksheet.
Microsoft Word is a word processor. Microsoft Excel is a spreadsheet application.
If you copy data from Excel and paste it into Word, then it will appear as a table in Word.
Its making Your Yes to be Yes and Your No to be No which means to a man of Your word...
Excel and Microsoft word are two different programs. To ask how to you use excel for typing ms word does not make sense
It does not include Word and Excel, but it has its own word processor and its own spreadsheet.
Merge brings one to several individual cells from Excel into Word. The formatting in the merged Word document depends on Word, not Excel. If you would like to retain the same formatting as you had in Excel, then format the target location in Word to match the cell from 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.