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Part II: MS Office Excel
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Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

Dec 26, 2015

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Page 1: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

Part II: MS Office

Excel

Page 2: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

Introduction

• Easy to Use

• A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can enter numbers or words.

• Learn on a “need to know” basis

• “What” if scenarios

• Templates may be created

• Interaction

Page 3: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

• The spreadsheet program is an extremely flexible tool that can be applied to a wide range of common problems. – Financial planners - to make forecasts.

• (e.g. a manager could enter this year’s sales figures and a formula for projected growth over the next five years. The program could then compute the sales forecast and adjust figures accordingly).

– Managers - to help prepare budgets. • (e.g. Alternative budgets can be analysed by simply changing budget

values).

– Accountants - to perform tax planning and prepare income statements, profit-and-loss statements and balance sheets.

Page 4: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

Advantages of spreadsheets

• Spreadsheets make doing most calculations a great deal easier than doing them on a calculator.

• Spreadsheets lets you visually organise your data into rows and columns.

• Spreadsheets can be used for simple lists and collections of data.

• Formulae and Functions• Finally, spreadsheets can turn your data into a chart.

Page 5: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

• Some of the things you can do with a spreadsheet are:• Add columns of numbers.• Add rows of numbers.• Compute averages, standard deviations, and other statistics on

rows and columns of numbers.• Find the maximum or minimum value in a set of

values.• Compute the number of days between two dates.• Sort lists alphabetically or numerically.

• In general, spreadsheets are used for creating tables, making charts, doing calculations, or keeping short lists of things.

Page 6: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

Interface

Page 7: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.
Page 8: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

Workbook

• A Workbook is made up of a number of Worksheets

• A Worksheet is made up of the rows and columns into which information is entered

• 65,536 rows allowed in each worksheet

• Columns in spreadsheets are identified with letters of the alphabet, i.e. A, B, C, … Z, AA, AB, AC,

Page 9: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

• Cell:– This is the space that occurs at the intersection between a

row and a column.

• Cell address or cell reference: – This is the combination of letter and number that

identifies the intersection between a specified row and column.

• It specifies the cell’s exact position within the worksheet. Cells are generally addressed as ColumnLetterRowNumber. For example, a cell in column B and row 18 has the cell reference B18, likewise a cell in column ED and row 650 is referenced ED650.

Page 10: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

Worksheets • The essence of the worksheet is that each cell can, at

the same time, contain two different types of entry.– The entry that is visible when you look at the worksheet

on the screen. This is a number or a piece of text and this might be typed into place as you enter data, or it might arise as a result of some earlier action.

– The other type, invisible entry, can be a formula of some type, which will decide what the visible entry shall be. This formula entry can be typed, displayed and edited, but is never visible during your normal use of the worksheet.

Page 11: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

Example

Page 12: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

Creating and opening Workbooks

• To create a new default workbook– click on the new icon located within the

standard rule bar

• Using a standard template– Click on the file drop down menu, click on the

new command

• Open an existing Workbook– From the File menu choose open

Page 13: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

Spreadsheet Design• Spreadsheets help solve problems that can be represented with

numbers and formulae.• The first step in step in solving a problem, is to structure the

problem and its solution. In the case of number-based problems, this involves building a numeric model of the problem.

• This means we need to identify the entities or objects of the problem and items relating to the objects (attributes).

• The entities or objects of the problem will form the columns while the attributes or items relating to the objects will form the rows.

Page 14: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

• For example, say you want to work out the balance of your January account. You need to gather the existing data for this:

• Deposit cheques and Spending cheques.• These are the entities.• The attributes for the deposit cheques could be:• grant cheque, parents contribution, part time

job• and those for the spending cheques could be:• rents, bills {heating, telephone}, food, drink.

Page 15: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

Example

• Then you add the amount of the deposit cheques and subtract the amount of the spending cheques.

• Most people do this in a chequebook register, which consists of vertical columns for addition, subtraction, and the balance and horizontal rows for listing each cheque received and paid.

Page 16: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.
Page 17: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

Data Types• Numbers

– Entering number into a spreadsheet creates static values. In other words, the values do not change unless you manually enter a new number.

• Text– text is used for labelling and annotating the numbers

• Formulae– Formulae allow you to perform arithmetic operations

on numbers and compare the contents of one cell to another.

Page 18: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

Formulae• When a formula is entered into a cell then the

result of the formula is displayed rather than the content.

• In Microsoft Works, a formula must always begin with an equal sign “=” followed by a mathematical expression.

• Consider this example for a formula “=A1+B3”.• The mathematical expression is A1+B3,

Page 19: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

• A1 and B3 are the operands.• The plus “+” sign is the arithmetic operator.• Suppose this formula is entered in cell D5, then this means• “Add the contents of cell A1 to the contents of cell B3 and show

the result in cell D5”.• If the contents in one (or both) of the cells A1 and B3 were to be

changed, then the numerical value in cell D5 will change correspondingly.

• Entering formulae into spreadsheets therefore creates dynamic values.

• Dynamic values change automatically if the values that created them change.

Page 20: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

Operators• Operator Action

Example

+ Plus A1+B1

- Minus A1-B1

* Multiply A1*B1

/ Divide A1/B1

^ Raise to A1^3the power

% Divide by A1%B1

Page 21: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

Functions• Functions enhanced the calculations that

spreadsheets can perform.• These functions often work on a number of cells

together to produce a single figure result.• A typical example is the SUM function that adds up

all the cell in the range you specify.• For example, we can used this formula:• =B4+B5+B6+B7+B8+B9• to add the column of figures in, say, a shopping list.

Page 22: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.
Page 23: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

• Instead of writing that formula in the above format, we could equally well use this function:

• SUM(B4:B9).• This would produce the same result and it is a lot

easier to write.• The function SUM(B4:B9) means:• the sum of the contents of cells B4,B5,B6,B7,B8

and B9.

• The term B4:B9 is called the range.

Page 24: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

Mathematical Functions

• Mathematical functions provides the user with the ability to calculate arithmetic and trigonometric functions quickly.

• Examples:• SUM(B4:B9)• SQRT(F4*B5)• ROUND(G3,3)

Page 25: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

Statistical Functions• Statistical functions permits the user to find the

sum of all items in a designated column or row, the maximum and minimum values in a list and the average, standard deviation and variance of a group of items in a list.

• Examples:• AVG(D3:H3)• MIN(C3:G10)• VAR(A1:A10)

Page 26: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

Logical Functions

• Logical functions allow the user to specify the action that is to be taken based on the value of a logical expression. A logical expression is a mathematical expression and logical operators that can take on a “true” or a “false” value only.

• Example:• IF (14>B6,5,10)

Page 27: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

Editing the Worksheet

• With any computing program it is important to be able to edit the information easily.

• The spreadsheet program will allow you to:• change the numbers in a cell.

• alter a formula.

• edit a piece of text.

• alter the display format of any of the cells.

• insert or delete columns and rows.

Page 28: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

To insert a blank row

– highlight the row where the new row is to be inserted

– then perform the Insert Row/Column command in the Insert Menu.

• Note:• The row that initially occupied this location and all

of the rows beneath it will be “pushed down”.

• Cell addresses appearing in formulae will automatically be adjusted for this new location.

Page 29: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

To insert a blank column

– highlight the column where the new column is to be inserted

– then perform the Insert Row/Column command in the Insert Menu.

• Note:• The column that initially occupied this location and all

of the columns to its right will be “pushed to the right”.

• All cell addresses appearing in formulae will automatically be adjusted as required.

Page 30: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

To delete a row or column– highlight the row or column– then perform the Cut command from the Edit menu.

• Alternatively:• perform the Delete Row/Column command from the Insert

Menu.

• Note:• When you delete a row or column, other cells shift to fill in the

gap.• The Clear command in the Edit menu will only remove all the

cell contents within that row or column.• You can recover the deleted information by performing the

Undo command from the Edit menu.

Page 31: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

Copying Cells– Spreadsheet editing abilities cover more than just

altering what is already in the spreadsheet.

– Excel allows you to copy a cell or a range of cells using the Copy and Paste command in the Edit Menu.

• Note:

• If the destination cells contain information, Excel overwrites them without warning you.

• The spreadsheet program provides other editing functions that speed up the entry of information or the setting up of formulae in a worksheet.

Page 32: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

• For example, consider this table shown above. Suppose we want to calculate the total sales of the products over three months.

• To total up all the months sales, you might have to write the following formulae in column F:• cell F2 =SUM(B2:E2)• cell F3 =SUM(B3:E3)• cell F4 =SUM(B4:E4)

Page 33: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

Autofill

• Excel has an autofill procedure that saves you typing all these formulae:– Enter the formula into one cell, say F2.– Select the cells you want to copy the formula– then perform the Fill Down command in the

Edit Menu.

• How Excel copies the formula depends on the kinds of references used within it.

Page 34: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

Cell References

• There are three types of Cell References– Relative– Absolute– Mixed

Page 35: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

Relative Reference

• A relative cell reference is the address of a cell relative to the cell the reference is in.

• Relative references are useful when you want to copy a formula to several columns or rows.

• What about the situation where you want the cell reference to stay the same?

Page 36: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

Absolute Reference• An absolute cell reference is the exact location of a cell.• In other words, a cell reference that always refers to the

same cell even if copied to a new location.• To indicate an absolute reference, enter a dollar ($) sign

in front of the column letter and row number of the reference.

• The absolute reference to cell C3, for example, would be written $C$3.

• Absolute references are useful when you need a constant in a formula.

Page 37: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

Mixed Reference• A mixed cell reference is an address that either the

column or row reference is absolute while the other remains relative.

• To enter a mixed reference enter a dollar sign ($) before the column letter or row number.

• Example:• If the dollar sign is before the column letter, then that

column letter is absolute.• $B7 would keep column B absolute and the row 7

relative

Page 38: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

Charts• Usefulness of charts:

• Charts provide instant visual overview of your data.

• Charts are valuable when complex numeric data need to be communicated quickly and effectively. In the business world, charts are used in presentations, technical literature, and financial reports.

• Charts help you spot differences in a set of values.

• When numbers are properly charted, the unusual numbers or relationships will stand out.

Page 39: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

• All charts start with a grid that is divided into an X axis running from left to right and a Y axis running from bottom to top.

• The Y axis is used to plot a group of numbers.• Value (Y) series - group of numbers• Excel can plot a maximum of six different Y series.• A scale, on the Y axis, helps the viewer of the chart

understands the actual values of the numbers.• There can be only one X series along the X axis.• The X series is often a series of words used to label the

corresponding numbers on the Y series.

Page 40: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

Types of Charts

• Bar chart• This is a type of chart in which numerical data

are represented by vertical bars.• Most simple charting needs are met nicely with

the bar chart.• Types of Bar charts:• When there is more than one Y series, you can

get bar charts of this type:• Side-by-side bar chart

Page 41: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

Example

Page 42: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

Side-by-side bar chart

Page 43: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

Stacked Bar Chart

Page 44: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

Pie Chart

Page 45: Part II: MS Office Excel. Introduction Easy to Use A spreadsheet program is a super calculator that provides you with a giant grid upon which you can.

Line Chart