You can copy data from Access and paste it directly into Excel. From a table or query, data can be selected and then copied and pasted into Excel. In that case, data changing in the original Access file will not change data in the Excel file. To do that there must be a link between the data. You can also import data from Access into Excel and from Excel into Access, again maintaining a link to the source if you want.
Usually a table, but it depends on what you copy.
It will put the fields in Access into columns in Excel, and records in Access will be in rows in Excel. Data will be converted to appropriate data types.
Yes, but you would use the Access import option, instead of an Excel export option. You also can use Excel to SaveAs various formats that Access could import, but direct import from Access probably would be the most efficient method. See related links for various options for sharing data between Excel and Access.
There would be some. For example if you copy data from Excel into Word, only values will come through, not the underlying formulas.There would be some. For example if you copy data from Excel into Word, only values will come through, not the underlying formulas.There would be some. For example if you copy data from Excel into Word, only values will come through, not the underlying formulas.There would be some. For example if you copy data from Excel into Word, only values will come through, not the underlying formulas.There would be some. For example if you copy data from Excel into Word, only values will come through, not the underlying formulas.There would be some. For example if you copy data from Excel into Word, only values will come through, not the underlying formulas.There would be some. For example if you copy data from Excel into Word, only values will come through, not the underlying formulas.There would be some. For example if you copy data from Excel into Word, only values will come through, not the underlying formulas.There would be some. For example if you copy data from Excel into Word, only values will come through, not the underlying formulas.There would be some. For example if you copy data from Excel into Word, only values will come through, not the underlying formulas.There would be some. For example if you copy data from Excel into Word, only values will come through, not the underlying formulas.
The data will be in its original form, but any changes in the data will be reflected in the Excel document, as will changing the Excel document affect the Access table. It is the same data when it is linked, not copied.
If you copy data from Excel and paste it into Word, then it will appear as a table in Word.
Yes you can copy data from Word to Excel. If it is in a table, it is very good as it will transfer the data direct into cells in the same way.
Yes, a chart in Excel is created from data that has been selected in the worksheet.
One way would be to copy the data into a text file, using Notepad perhaps, and then save the file and open it with Excel. The text will then be in different cells. You could then copy that data back into the original Excel file.
They are for different programs for different purposes: Access is a database (basically single user), Excel is a spreadsheet program.
When copying cells in Excel to a destination where data already exists, you can choose to either replace the existing data with the copied data, keep the existing data and not copy over it, or merge the copied data with the existing data. When moving cells in Excel to a destination where data already exists, the original cells will be replaced by the moved cells.
Select and copy the row data.Go to the top cell of the column where you would like to copy the data.Click on copy - transpose.Observe the data from the row in the column.Go back and delete the row data.