It can reduce the amount of decimal places shown. It can also make the number show in a rounded up or down format, though it will retain the actual value for use in calculations. So if you had 2.32 and decreased the amount of decimal places to one, it would display as 2.3 in a cell. It would still use 2.32 if a formula using the cell was created.
Microsoft Excel allows you to be pretty<3
Yes it does.
It allows you to round the decimal fraction so as to display fewer digits.
Environment for Microsoft Excel includes the following:Microsoft Office Excel (various version available with the most current one being Microsoft Excel 2007) This is only available as part of Microsoft Office SharePoint Server (as opposed to Microsoft SharePoint Services which is a free component available with Microsoft Windows Server 2003 onwards)It is used to distribute Excel spreadsheets. One has the ability to allow for only specific cells to be edited by the user and could be used in, for example, a budgeting process. Workflow and storage is managed by Microsoft Office SharePoint server in this caseMicrosoft Excel ServicesE-learning for Microsoft Excel is available through the Microsoft website.
As a number format, it is a number with no specific format. The other ones, like currency, Number and Accounting allow you to do things like specify decimal places or currency symbols.
It allows you to round the decimal fraction so as to display fewer digits.
Functions allow you to perform some mathematical or string procedures to other cells.
Yes, it can allow you to do that, along with many other things you can do. There are also other pieces of software that you could use for managing schedules like Outlook or Microsoft Project.
Excel provides formats that allow you to save files on a PC to be used on a Mac or on a Mac to be used on a PC, so the answer is yes.
Because that is the way Excel is designed. I suppose the programmers could have added a section to allow user configuration, but I suspect there was not much of a demand for that function. If you feel that is an important feature you would like to see in the next version of Excel, let Microsoft know. See related link for where you can send your product suggestions to Microsoft.
OLE stands for Object Linking and Embedding. It is a process that Microsoft developed to allow you to embed and link document and other objects. It allows you to create a document in an application designed to create a specific object, such as a chart from PowerPoint, and embed that object in another application, such as Excel.
There are many software programs that will allow a person to make a flowchart to determine if the number is positive or negative. The person could use Open Office, Microsoft Word, Microsoft PowerPoint, or Microsoft Excel.