Want this question answered?
No. It is spreadsheet software. Powerpoint would be presentation software.
During step 5 of the CRM process to ensure compliance, you may ask questions like "Have all necessary regulations and guidelines been followed?", "Are there any potential conflicts of interest?", and "Have all relevant documentation and approvals been obtained?" These questions help ensure that the organization is operating within legal and ethical boundaries.
Both of these computer programs are an example of Microsoft paint software.
It really depends on exactly what you want to do with the charts and what data source is used for the charts. Generally you would go for Excel initially. If you wanted to do some fancy presentation with the chart, it could then be copied into Powerpoint.
A
o Creating a presentation using presentation software such as MS PowerPoint with pie chartso Download PASS data into an application such as MS Excelo Creating a table using software such as MS Word
Generally it would still be called a spreadsheet, but it could be called a What-if spreadsheet.
Excel can do any kind of spreadsheet, so the answer would be any kind of spreadsheet.
You can analyze your profit and loss on a spreadsheet.
you make the spreadsheet bigger
A spreadsheet is software that represents financial data in a tabular format. It is often part of an office package that also includes word processing and the ability to create and work with drawings, media presentation, and database manipulation. Examples of computer spreadsheet programs are Excel in Microsoft Office, Calc in Libreoffice and Openoffice, aand google sheets (part of google docs).
In a database a field with a formula is called a calculated field. A calculated field should actually be in a table, as it can be calculated from data in other fields in the table, so it normally only appears in queries, reports and forms. In a spreadsheet it would just be a calculation.