Excel has many dozens of functions. An example of some of the functions are:
IF
ISERR
LEFT
LEN
LOOKUP
RIGHT
SUM
SUMIF
Functions allways begin with the equal sign. An example of a function is =SUM(A1:A13).
See related links for a list of Excel functions.
No. It is an application, specifically a database application.
Yes, a spreadsheet is a computer application. It is classed as applications software, as opposed to systems software.
In a spreadsheet a built-in formula is called a function.
VisiCalc
Microsoft Excel is a spreadsheet application. While it does have some database capabilities, it is not a DBMS.Microsoft Excel is a spreadsheet application. While it does have some database capabilities, it is not a DBMS.Microsoft Excel is a spreadsheet application. While it does have some database capabilities, it is not a DBMS.Microsoft Excel is a spreadsheet application. While it does have some database capabilities, it is not a DBMS.Microsoft Excel is a spreadsheet application. While it does have some database capabilities, it is not a DBMS.Microsoft Excel is a spreadsheet application. While it does have some database capabilities, it is not a DBMS.Microsoft Excel is a spreadsheet application. While it does have some database capabilities, it is not a DBMS.Microsoft Excel is a spreadsheet application. While it does have some database capabilities, it is not a DBMS.Microsoft Excel is a spreadsheet application. While it does have some database capabilities, it is not a DBMS.Microsoft Excel is a spreadsheet application. While it does have some database capabilities, it is not a DBMS.Microsoft Excel is a spreadsheet application. While it does have some database capabilities, it is not a DBMS.
Double click on the spreadsheet file (assuming you have the spreadsheet application loaded on your computer).
Excel is Microsoft's spreadsheet application.
No. It is an application.
Yes it is. It is a free and open source spreadsheet program.
A spreadsheet means a computer application that is used to simulate paper accounting.
Microsoft Excel
Spreadsheets are for analysing and manipulating numbers and doing calculations on them, which is what financial departments need to do a lot of. A spreadsheet also has lots of specialised financial functions built into it, which can speed up the work of a finance department.