It is on the Formulas tab, in the Auditing section. To hide or show formulas you can also just press Ctrl and the `key, which is the key beside the 1 key on your keyboard.
It's the same standard worksheet but just displayed differently. A quick way to toggle between the formulae displayed and the results (normal) view is to hold Ctrl and press the button with three symbols on it just below the Esc button.
There are various ways to print an Excel file. From the file manager (explorer), select the file, right click and choose print Open the Excel file - Press Ctrl + P to print - Choose File from the top menu, Click Print - Click the Printer Icon from the Toolbar Hope this helps Rohini
Under the formulas tab, there is an option called "Show Formulas" in Formula Auditing. This applies for Excel 2010 (what I am using) and should apply for Excel 2003 and 2007 as well. For older options (or if there is no such option in Excel 2003/2007, search for something similar).
Without data, there is not much Excel can do. Formulas will have no data to work on. Charts will not show anything. Data is very important to Excel. There are things you can do without it, like draw shapes, but Excel is designed to do things with data, so you need to have some.
view tab, show group
Just like any Microsoft compliant application, the Title Bar in MS Excel displays the Application Name and the current Filename of the Worsheet, this can be found o the left most portion of the bar.By double-clicking on the Title-Bar, it switches its window Maximize to Restore Mode and vice-versa.You could also move the active window by click-dragging it on the Title Bar when in Restore Mode.Performing a Right-Mouse click on the Title Bar would also show the a Short cut menu for Restoring, Minimizing, Maximizing, etc the active Window
To access shortcut menus with a three-button mouse click the right hand/secondary mouse button. The shortcut menu will show up on the screen once you do this.
If you mean to find which cells have formulas and not values, you do it using the Goto option. Press the F5 key and then click on Special, which opens another set of options. From there, select Formulas and all formulas in the worksheet will be selected. Pressing Ctrl and the ' key will show the formulas that are in cells.
In Excel 2007:Click on the Formulas ribbon tab.In the Formula Auditing section, click Show Formulas. This will display formulas instead of calculated results.Print the spreadsheet as you normally would.When done evaluating for formulas, do not forget to turn the Show Forumulas off.In Excel 2003 or earlier:From the Tools menu, select Formula Auditing and click on Formula Auditing Mode.This will display formulas instead of calculated results.Print the spreadsheet as you normally would.When done evaluating for formulas, do not forget to turn the Show Forumulas off.control-~ will display formulasthen you can print themcontrol-~ toggles back to valuesIf you press and hold the Ctrl key and then press the `key, all formulas will be shown in cells instead of the values. You can also achieve this by going to the Tools menu and picking Options. From there go to the View tab and put a tick beside formulas. When printing, there is a option to print formulas instead of the values.In Excel 2007: From the Formula tab on the menu ribbon, in the Formula Auditing section, click on Show Formulas. That will display the formulas instead of the results in each row that has a formula. Then, you just print as you normally would. Remember to turn Show Formulas off when you want to go back to showing the results of the formulas instead the forumulas themselves.On the Formulas bar, in the Formula Auditing section, click on Show Formulas to toggle formula view on and off. When the formula view is turned on, you will print formulas in the cells when you print the document. When the formula view is turned off, you will print values in the cells when you print the document.
By pressing Ctrl and `(apostrophe not single quote) the formulas will be shown instead of the values. However, this will have the effect of widening all of the cells in order to show the formulas, some of which may be quite long. So if there are lots of formulas then it may not be possible to get them all to appear on the screen at the same time or on one printed page.
MS Excel does not have a slide show, but MS PowerPoint does.
An Excel worksheet is for data and figures and for doing calculations on. All the columns and rows are identifiable by letters and numbers respectively. Individual cells are identified by their column letters and row numbers. A Datasheet in Access shows the data from a table or query. Cells are not referenced in the same way. They are as fields for columns and records for rows. The Datasheet is limited to the amount of data being displayed, whereas a worksheet is much larger. A datasheet just shows pure data, whereas the worksheet can show data and formulas. Calculations can be done in queries, but once in datasheet view, you cannot see the underlying formulas. These are some of the main differences. There are others, as Access and Excel are two different kinds of applications.An Excel worksheet is for data and figures and for doing calculations on. All the columns and rows are identifiable by letters and numbers respectively. Individual cells are identified by their column letters and row numbers. A Datasheet in Access shows the data from a table or query. Cells are not referenced in the same way. They are as fields for columns and records for rows. The Datasheet is limited to the amount of data being displayed, whereas a worksheet is much larger. A datasheet just shows pure data, whereas the worksheet can show data and formulas. Calculations can be done in queries, but once in datasheet view, you cannot see the underlying formulas. These are some of the main differences. There are others, as Access and Excel are two different kinds of applications.An Excel worksheet is for data and figures and for doing calculations on. All the columns and rows are identifiable by letters and numbers respectively. Individual cells are identified by their column letters and row numbers. A Datasheet in Access shows the data from a table or query. Cells are not referenced in the same way. They are as fields for columns and records for rows. The Datasheet is limited to the amount of data being displayed, whereas a worksheet is much larger. A datasheet just shows pure data, whereas the worksheet can show data and formulas. Calculations can be done in queries, but once in datasheet view, you cannot see the underlying formulas. These are some of the main differences. There are others, as Access and Excel are two different kinds of applications.An Excel worksheet is for data and figures and for doing calculations on. All the columns and rows are identifiable by letters and numbers respectively. Individual cells are identified by their column letters and row numbers. A Datasheet in Access shows the data from a table or query. Cells are not referenced in the same way. They are as fields for columns and records for rows. The Datasheet is limited to the amount of data being displayed, whereas a worksheet is much larger. A datasheet just shows pure data, whereas the worksheet can show data and formulas. Calculations can be done in queries, but once in datasheet view, you cannot see the underlying formulas. These are some of the main differences. There are others, as Access and Excel are two different kinds of applications.An Excel worksheet is for data and figures and for doing calculations on. All the columns and rows are identifiable by letters and numbers respectively. Individual cells are identified by their column letters and row numbers. A Datasheet in Access shows the data from a table or query. Cells are not referenced in the same way. They are as fields for columns and records for rows. The Datasheet is limited to the amount of data being displayed, whereas a worksheet is much larger. A datasheet just shows pure data, whereas the worksheet can show data and formulas. Calculations can be done in queries, but once in datasheet view, you cannot see the underlying formulas. These are some of the main differences. There are others, as Access and Excel are two different kinds of applications.An Excel worksheet is for data and figures and for doing calculations on. All the columns and rows are identifiable by letters and numbers respectively. Individual cells are identified by their column letters and row numbers. A Datasheet in Access shows the data from a table or query. Cells are not referenced in the same way. They are as fields for columns and records for rows. The Datasheet is limited to the amount of data being displayed, whereas a worksheet is much larger. A datasheet just shows pure data, whereas the worksheet can show data and formulas. Calculations can be done in queries, but once in datasheet view, you cannot see the underlying formulas. These are some of the main differences. There are others, as Access and Excel are two different kinds of applications.An Excel worksheet is for data and figures and for doing calculations on. All the columns and rows are identifiable by letters and numbers respectively. Individual cells are identified by their column letters and row numbers. A Datasheet in Access shows the data from a table or query. Cells are not referenced in the same way. They are as fields for columns and records for rows. The Datasheet is limited to the amount of data being displayed, whereas a worksheet is much larger. A datasheet just shows pure data, whereas the worksheet can show data and formulas. Calculations can be done in queries, but once in datasheet view, you cannot see the underlying formulas. These are some of the main differences. There are others, as Access and Excel are two different kinds of applications.An Excel worksheet is for data and figures and for doing calculations on. All the columns and rows are identifiable by letters and numbers respectively. Individual cells are identified by their column letters and row numbers. A Datasheet in Access shows the data from a table or query. Cells are not referenced in the same way. They are as fields for columns and records for rows. The Datasheet is limited to the amount of data being displayed, whereas a worksheet is much larger. A datasheet just shows pure data, whereas the worksheet can show data and formulas. Calculations can be done in queries, but once in datasheet view, you cannot see the underlying formulas. These are some of the main differences. There are others, as Access and Excel are two different kinds of applications.An Excel worksheet is for data and figures and for doing calculations on. All the columns and rows are identifiable by letters and numbers respectively. Individual cells are identified by their column letters and row numbers. A Datasheet in Access shows the data from a table or query. Cells are not referenced in the same way. They are as fields for columns and records for rows. The Datasheet is limited to the amount of data being displayed, whereas a worksheet is much larger. A datasheet just shows pure data, whereas the worksheet can show data and formulas. Calculations can be done in queries, but once in datasheet view, you cannot see the underlying formulas. These are some of the main differences. There are others, as Access and Excel are two different kinds of applications.An Excel worksheet is for data and figures and for doing calculations on. All the columns and rows are identifiable by letters and numbers respectively. Individual cells are identified by their column letters and row numbers. A Datasheet in Access shows the data from a table or query. Cells are not referenced in the same way. They are as fields for columns and records for rows. The Datasheet is limited to the amount of data being displayed, whereas a worksheet is much larger. A datasheet just shows pure data, whereas the worksheet can show data and formulas. Calculations can be done in queries, but once in datasheet view, you cannot see the underlying formulas. These are some of the main differences. There are others, as Access and Excel are two different kinds of applications.An Excel worksheet is for data and figures and for doing calculations on. All the columns and rows are identifiable by letters and numbers respectively. Individual cells are identified by their column letters and row numbers. A Datasheet in Access shows the data from a table or query. Cells are not referenced in the same way. They are as fields for columns and records for rows. The Datasheet is limited to the amount of data being displayed, whereas a worksheet is much larger. A datasheet just shows pure data, whereas the worksheet can show data and formulas. Calculations can be done in queries, but once in datasheet view, you cannot see the underlying formulas. These are some of the main differences. There are others, as Access and Excel are two different kinds of applications.