In order to do formulas that use values in cells, you need to be able to refer to those cells in the formulas. That is what a cell reference does. You can then create formulas that can be copied quickly and be used for any values that may appear in the cells. As much as possible cell references, rather than values, should be used in formulas.
A 1 in Microsoft Excel is a value. A1 is a cell in column A and row 1.
You do not. Excel does not record the change date of an individual cell.
A1
depends on what context you mean it. if you want to deduct a certain cell value from the other cell value then minus sign will do just that.
Cell Reference
Formatting can change the look of a cell and its contents.
It is the cell in column A, row 4 in a spreadsheet, such as Microsoft Excel.
It should be short and meaningful. It should not be the name of a cell or function in Excel. It should be easy to remember. It should be unique.
I am not aware of a name menu in Excel. However, Excel has a name box that displays the name or cell reference of the active cell.
You can use the Roundup function as follows: =ROUNDUP(0.08,0) or if the 0.08 is in a cell, say B2 then: =ROUNDUP(B2,0)
When you change the color of the fill in a cell you are changing its format. This action applies to Microsoft Excel.
A cell is a rectangle that can hold a number, text, formula etc.