Microsoft Excel 2007 and 2010 Free ebook edition 1.0 (preview) Power Tips for Microsoft Excel. by Victor Chan

Similar documents
1. Right-click the worksheet tab you want to rename. The worksheet menu appears. 2. Select Rename.

Microsoft How to Series

The Foundation. Review in an instant

Excel Select a template category in the Office.com Templates section. 5. Click the Download button.

6. Essential Spreadsheet Operations

Microsoft Excel 2010 Part 2: Intermediate Excel

Excel 2007 New Features Table of Contents

Excel 2013 Beyond TheBasics

Rev. C 11/09/2010 Downers Grove Public Library Page 1 of 41

Microsoft Excel 2007

Intro to Excel. To start a new workbook, click on the Blank workbook icon in the middle of the screen.

Table of Contents. Tip 1: Page setup 3. Tip 2: Printing different ranges in a spreadsheet 5. Tip 3: Ensuring that a long formula is displayed 6

Lastly, in case you don t already know this, and don t have Excel on your computers, you can get it for free through IT s website under software.

Using Microsoft Excel

Introduction to Microsoft Excel 2010

Section 1 Microsoft Excel Overview

1. Math symbols Operation Symbol Example Order

Introduction to Excel

Excel 2013 Intermediate

Excel 2010: Getting Started with Excel

Inserting or deleting a worksheet

MICROSOFT EXCEL TUTORIAL HANDOUT

Excel Foundation Quick Reference (Windows PC)

Beginner s Guide to Microsoft Excel 2002

Explore commands on the ribbon Each ribbon tab has groups, and each group has a set of related commands.

ESSENTIAL EXCEL TIPS. Tips All New Users Must Know. CONQUER THE FEAR OF EXCEL

Introduction to Microsoft Excel 2010

DOING MORE WITH EXCEL: MICROSOFT OFFICE 2010

Free ebooks ==>

Microsoft Excel 2010 Tutorial

Overview and Instructions

Using Microsoft Word. Tables

Microsoft Excel for Lawyers - The Fundamentals Reference Guide

Tips & Tricks: MS Excel

Excel Main Screen. Fundamental Concepts. General Keyboard Shortcuts Open a workbook Create New Save Preview and Print Close a Workbook

EXCEL BASICS: MICROSOFT OFFICE 2010

Intermediate Excel 2003

SUM - This says to add together cells F28 through F35. Notice that it will show your result is

EXCEL 2003 DISCLAIMER:

Status Bar: Right click on the Status Bar to add or remove features.

DOING MORE WITH EXCEL: MICROSOFT OFFICE 2013

Rev. B 12/16/2015 Downers Grove Public Library Page 1 of 40

PART 7. Getting Started with Excel

2. create the workbook file

Microsoft Excel is a spreadsheet tool capable of performing calculations, analyzing data and integrating information from different programs.

Learning Worksheet Fundamentals

Microsoft Office Excel 2003

Introduction to Microsoft Excel 2007

THE EXCEL ENVIRONMENT... 1 EDITING...

EXCEL 2002 (XP) FOCUS ON: DESIGNING SPREADSHEETS AND WORKBOOKS

MS Excel Henrico County Public Library. I. Tour of the Excel Window

Excel 2013 for Beginners

EXCEL BASICS: MICROSOFT OFFICE 2007

EXCEL TUTORIAL.

KNACK TRAINING. MICROSOFT OFFICE: TIPS & TRICKS FOR EFFICIENCY

Using Microsoft Excel

EXCEL 2007 TIP SHEET. Dialog Box Launcher these allow you to access additional features associated with a specific Group of buttons within a Ribbon.

Copyright 2018 MakeUseOf. All Rights Reserved.

Welcome to Introduction to Microsoft Excel 2010

Microsoft Excel 2010

WEEK NO. 12 MICROSOFT EXCEL 2007

Creating a Spreadsheet by Using Excel

The Menu and Toolbar in Excel (see below) look much like the Word tools and most of the tools behave as you would expect.

My Top 5 Formulas OutofhoursAdmin

Introduction to Microsoft Excel

Microsoft Excel 2010 Basic

4) Study the section of a worksheet in the image below. What is the cell address of the cell containing the word "Qtr3"?

EXCEL 2010 BASICS JOUR 772 & 472 / Ira Chinoy

MS Excel Henrico County Public Library. I. Tour of the Excel Window

COPYRIGHTED MATERIAL. Making Excel More Efficient

12 BASICS OF MS-EXCEL

YES! You really can... BOOST YOUR MICROSOFT EXCEL SKILLS IN SECONDS TIPS & TRICKS. for Microsoft Excel. (Versions 2007, 2010, 2013, 2016)

Excel 2016 Basics for Windows

Objectives. Objectives. Objectives. Starting Excel. Plan Ahead 3/9/2010. Excel Chapter 1. Microsoft Office 2007

Using Microsoft Excel

Excel Shortcuts Increasing YOUR Productivity

Using Adobe Photoshop

Part 1: Understanding Windows XP Basics

PARTS OF A WORKSHEET. Rows Run horizontally across a worksheet and are labeled with numbers.

Excel. module. Lesson 1 Create a Worksheet Lesson 2 Create and Revise. Lesson 3 Edit and Format

Chapter 7 Getting Started with Calc:

Application of Skills: Microsoft Excel 2013 Tutorial

Using Microsoft Excel

DOWNLOAD PDF EXCEL MACRO TO PRINT WORKSHEET TO

Excel 2003 Essentials

Microsoft Excel 2013: Excel Basics June 2014

QUICK EXCEL TUTORIAL. The Very Basics

At least one Charley File workbook for New Excel. This has an xlsx extension and is for PC Excel 2007, Mac Excel 2008, and after.

Excel Tables & PivotTables

Excel 2013 Intermediate

Using Microsoft Excel

Interim Standards New Directions Workbook One EASI Tool Excel Support Document Contents:

Microsoft Excel 2013: Part 3 More on Formatting Cells And Worksheet Basics. To apply number formatting:

DOING MORE WITH WORD: MICROSOFT OFFICE 2007

Excel Basics Rice Digital Media Commons Guide Written for Microsoft Excel 2010 Windows Edition by Eric Miller

Using Microsoft Word. Paragraph Formatting. Displaying Hidden Characters

MODULE III: NAVIGATING AND FORMULAS

Introduction to Microsoft Office PowerPoint 2010

Microsoft Excel Chapter 3. Working with Large Worksheets, Charting, and What-If Analysis

EXCEL Using Excel for Data Query & Management. Information Technology. MS Office Excel 2007 Users Guide. IT Training & Development

Transcription:

Microsoft Excel 2007 and 2010 Free ebook edition 1.0 (preview) Power Tips for Microsoft Excel Simple secrets to boost your productivity in Microsoft Excel Free Preview Edition by Victor Chan www.launchexcel.com 2012 VICTOR CHAN. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Power Tips for Microsoft Excel Please feel free to share this preview edition with as many people as you want but remember that the content remains copyrighted material. Copyright 2012 Victor Chan. All rights reserved. The material contained in this guide is for information, education and entertainment purposes only. The instructions contained in this ebook and the accompanying materials are provided as is and we do not guarantee they can be used in all situations. Launch Excel is not affiliated with, sponsored by, or endorsed by Microsoft. Excel is a registered trademark of the Microsoft Corporation. No part of this publication shall be sold in whole or in part in any form, without the prior written consent of the author. All trademarks and registered trademarks appearing in this guide are the property of their respective owners. The material in this guide may include information, products or services by third parties. Third Party materials comprise of the products and opinions expressed by their owners. As such, no responsibility or liability is assumed by the author for any Third Party material or opinions. The inclusion of such Third Party materials does not constitute my guarantee of any information, instruction, opinion, products or services contained within the Third Party Material. Unless otherwise note, the example data, companies, organizations, products, people and events depicted herein are fictitious. No association with any real company, organization, product, person or event is intended or should be inferred. Limit of Liability / Disclaimer of Warranty: While every precaution has been taken in the preparation of this ebook and its accompanying materials (including video tutorials and sample workbooks), the author makes no representations or warranties with respect to the accuracy or completeness of the contents of this work and specifically disclaims all warranties, including without limitation warranties of fitness for a particular purpose. The author shall not be liable for damages arising from the use of information contained herein. Further, readers should be aware that internet websites listed in this work may have changed or disappeared since the publication of this material. MICROSOFT EXCEL POWER TIPS EBOOK FREE EDITION PAGE 2 OF 27

About the free preview edition Feel free to share this preview edition with as many people as you want, as long as you do not modify it in any way. About the book This free preview edition of Power Tips for Microsoft Excel gives you a glimpse of what is inside the full edition. You are welcome to keep this copy and share it with as many people as you want as long as you don t modify any of the contents. Try out the Excel tips We hope you find the selection of tips in this preview edition are useful. There are many more tips in the full edition and these include: More great tricks for using the mouse for effectively Even more tips for doing faster and more accurate data entry Learn how to use Excel s built-in lists, as well as create your own custom lists Create drop down menus with Excel s built-in features Learn how to cascade your drop down menus Why you should use data validation, and some practical examples To really boost your learning speed and retention you should watch an experienced Excel user put the written steps into practice. A good way to do this is to buy the Premium edition of Power Tips, which comes with video tutorials. Simply seeing the tips in action can help you understand and remember how to use the tips. Learn more about the full product on the Launch Excel Store Visit the Launch Excel Store by clicking here. MICROSOFT EXCEL POWER TIPS EBOOK PAGE 3 OF 27

Contents Mouse Tips & Tricks 5 Section 2 Working with Worksheets 6 Section 6 Cell Range Tricks 9 Excel Data Entry 19 Section 2 Excel Can Speak! 20 Section 4 Keep Data Headings Visible 22 Get the full version for more tips... 27 LAUNCH EXCEL 2012

1 Mouse Tips & Tricks Everyone should learn some tricks in Excel. I ve used Excel for over 10 years and some of the coolest tricks I know are the simplest to learn. Little tricks can help you become a more powerful Excel user as they simplify and speed up your work. There is a cool range of mouse tips and tricks you will discover in this preview. Remember that there are many more tips in the full edition of Power Tips. Need to quickly rename a worksheet? Simply double click Have a lot of worksheets? Use the right click to show worksheet list How to select adjacent and non-adjacent worksheets Select, swap and copy cell selections fast How to quickly copy a range of formulas and paste as values using the mouse Share by e-mail Post to Facebook Share on LinkedIn Tweet the link Like the preview edition of Power Tips? Remember to share it with your friends and colleagues via e-mail and social media. Here is the download link you can share: http://www.launchexcel.com/power-tips-for-excel-preview CHAPTER 1: MOUSE TIPS & TRICKS PAGE 5 OF 27

Section 2 Working with Worksheets Excel Worksheets These mouse tricks help you deal with naming worksheets, navigating worksheets and selecting worksheets. Trick 3. Double click to rename worksheet Simply double click on a worksheet name to rename that worksheet. There s no need to right click on the worksheet then select Rename Sheet. It s only a small time saver but it makes the renaming process much faster if you are doing this over many worksheets. I find it helps me to keep my mind focused on more important things like what I m actually going to do on the worksheets after I have renamed them. Bonus: Keyboard shortcut to create new worksheet and rename If you like keyboard shortcuts, try this combination to create a new worksheet then rename it quickly without touching the mouse at all: SHIFT + F11 (create a new worksheet) ALT H O R (rename worksheet) Type in the new name Press ENTER to accept the change, or ESCAPE to cancel the renaming process CHAPTER 1: MOUSE TIPS & TRICKS PAGE 6 OF 27

Use the right mouse button to bring up the context menu. This works in many parts of Excel and other Microsoft Office applications such as Word. Try it out! Trick 4. Right click to show worksheets list Click your right mouse button anywhere over the arrow icons just to the left of the sheet names. The worksheets in your workbook are displayed and you can go to any of them without having to scroll to it individually. This is helpful when working in workbooks with many worksheets. If you have more than 16 worksheets, Excel will show you the first 16 worksheets and give you an option to view the rest by clicking on More Sheets CHAPTER 1: MOUSE TIPS & TRICKS PAGE 7 OF 27

Trick 5. CTRL + Click to select nonadjacent worksheets You can select many worksheets by clicking on the first one, holding the CTRL key, then clicking on the second, third, fourth etc., all while holding the CTRL key. The sheets don t need to be next to each other, and you can select them in any order you want. The first sheet you select will always remain selected, but you can deselect a sheet by clicking on it again. So if you went too far and selected four sheets instead of three you can simply click on the fourth sheet to deselect it (all while holding down the CTRL key). Once you group sheets using the CTRL key you can apply an action to them all at once. Say you have selected four worksheets using the CTRL key, you can change them all to a red sheet color and reposition them together all at once. Trick 6. SHIFT + Click to select adjacent worksheets Similar to trick 5 but instead of clicking on sheets separately, you first select one sheet, hold down the SHIFT key, then click on the second sheet. All sheets from the first sheet to the second sheet will be grouped together. Again you can apply actions to all the grouped sheets in one go, which saves time if you need to change the color of many sheets or reposition many sheets. Note: Unfortunately you cannot combine tricks 5 and 6 with the worksheets list from trick 4 Right click to show worksheets list. You can only select one sheet after showing the worksheets list. CHAPTER 1: MOUSE TIPS & TRICKS PAGE 8 OF 27

Section 6 Cell Range Tricks Work with Cell Selections Here are tricks to help you work with cell selections in Excel - including my favorite trick for switching the position of rows and columns (trick number 18) 13. Edit Cell Ranges in Formulas Use the mouse to edit cell ranges in a formula after pressing F2 to edit the formula. 1. Click on the cell with the formula you want to edit. 2. Press F2 to edit the formula. 3. Excel shows you colored borders around each range in that formula. You can simply select a range by clicking its border, then you can start dragging and resizing it. 4. Press Enter to accept the changes, or Escape to cancel. CHAPTER 1: MOUSE TIPS & TRICKS PAGE 9 OF 27

14. Jump to furthest row or column Double click cell borders to jump in the same direction e.g. double click on the bottom border to jump downwards Double click on cell border to jump to furthest row or column. 1. Select a cell in your data table 2. Double click on the cell border in the direcaon you want to go (up, down, lec, right) You can press and hold the SHIFT key to make a selection when jumping. You can also select a region of cells, press and hold SHIFT then double click on a border to make the jump. In this screenshot rows 3 to 8 will be selected from Category to Commission. CHAPTER 1: MOUSE TIPS & TRICKS PAGE 10 OF 27

15. Fast range selection (SHIFT + Click) Quickly select a range of cells by holding down the SHIFT key. Instead of clicking and dragging to select a range of cells you can click on the first cell, jump or scroll to the last cell, press & hold the SHIFT key then click on the second cell. Very handy if you want to select a range of cells that spans more than one page, as you can use the scroll bars to reach the second cell quickly. 1. Select the first cell. 2. Press the SHIFT key and keep it down. 3. Select the second cell. 4. Your selecaon gets extended to the second cell. After clicking on the second cell you can always change your mind, as long as you keep the SHIFT key down. Just select another cell and the range will automatically resize. This method is useful when you want to select a range of cells that does not fit nicely on one screen. 1. Select the first cell. 2. Scroll down / right using the scroll bars and find the second cell. 3. Press the SHIFT key and keep it down. 4. Select the second cell. 5. Your selecaon gets extended to the second cell (and your first cell is sall off- screen) CHAPTER 1: MOUSE TIPS & TRICKS PAGE 11 OF 27

16. Complex range selection (CTRL + Click) Select multiple cells in a complex pattern by holding down CTRL while clicking (or pressing SHIFT + F8 to toggle the multiple selection mode on and off) Select multiple cells in a complex pattern by holding down the CTRL key 1. Select a cell or range of cells. 2. Hold the CTRL key (or press SHIFT + F8 once) 3. Click to select further cells or ranges of cells... 4. and so on as many Ames as you want. 5. Every cell or range you select gets added to your selecaon. 6. Let go of CTRL key when finished (or press SHIFT + F8 once) After selecting multiple cells you can change the cell formatting, number format, formulas all in one go. You can also copy and paste your selection. If you want to change formulas in a multi-cell selection you should enter the formula then press CTRL + Enter. If you just press Enter the formula is written in the active cell, not the selection. One limitation is that you cannot deselect cells using this method, you need to start over if you select a cell you didn t want to select. CHAPTER 1: MOUSE TIPS & TRICKS PAGE 12 OF 27

17. Move selected range by dragging border Move your selected range of cells by dragging the dark outside border. Drag the selection border to move your selected range of cells to a new position, overwriting the existing contents. 1. Select a range of cells you want to move. 2. Move your mouse pointer over the border. 3. The mouse pointer changes to 4- way arrows 4. Click the border with the lec mouse bupon. 5. Drag the border and it moves to follow your mouse pointer. 6. Release the lec mouse bupon when you have found the right posiaon. This moves the selected range. When you release the left mouse button, the selected range is moved to the new position. Any formulas or values that were there before will be overwritten by the selection you dragged over. This does not overwrite worksheet objects such as shapes and charts, it only overwrites the content of cells. CHAPTER 1: MOUSE TIPS & TRICKS PAGE 13 OF 27

18. Swap selected cell ranges fast Quickly swap the position of cell ranges using SHIFT + Drag: Drag the selection border while holding the SHIFT key to swap your selected range of cells with another range. Look out for the light gray insertion marker that shows where the range will be inserted. 1. Select a range of cells you want to move. 2. Move your mouse pointer over the border. 3. The mouse pointer changes to 4- way arrows 4. Click the border with the lec mouse bupon. 5. Hold the SHIFT key and drag the border. You will see it move to follow your mouse pointer. 6. A light gray inseraon marker shows where the range will be inserted (this will either appear between columns or between rows depending on the mouse point posiaon). 7. Release the lec mouse bupon when you have found the right posiaon. This inserts the selected range. This is great for swapping the order of rows and columns. Play around with it to find out how it works. Trick 18 is one of my favorites. I came across it totally by accident because I was holding down the SHIFT key instead of the CTRL key (see trick 19). You can combine tips 18 and 19 to insert a copy of your range. Select your range, then hold both CTRL + SHIFT and drag to insert a copy and keep the original. CHAPTER 1: MOUSE TIPS & TRICKS PAGE 14 OF 27

19. Copy selected cell ranges fast Quickly copy a range of selected cells by holding down the CTRL key while dragging the dark outside border. Quickly copy your selected range by holding down the CTRL key 1. Select a range of cells you want to move. 2. Move your mouse pointer over the border. 3. The mouse pointer changes to 4- way arrows 4. Click the border with the lec mouse bupon. 5. Hold the CTRL key and drag the border. You will see it move to follow your mouse pointer, which has a + sign next to it. 6. A light gray inseraon marker shows where the range will be copied. 7. Release the lec mouse bupon when you have found the right posiaon. This copies the selected range. CHAPTER 1: MOUSE TIPS & TRICKS PAGE 15 OF 27

Part 1 of 3 Convert a range of formulas into values using the right mouse button to drag selection border 20. Convert formulas to values Use the right mouse button to drag the selection border away from the original selection then back again. When you release the right mouse button you are presented with options: choose to Copy here as Values Only. Here s the 6-step process: 1. Select a range of cells. 2. Click the selecaon border with the right mouse bupon. CHAPTER 1: MOUSE TIPS & TRICKS PAGE 16 OF 27

3. Keep the right mouse bupon pressed, and drag one column to the right. Part 2 of 3 Release right mouse button and select Copy here as values only 4. Keep the right mouse bupon pressed, and drag back into the original posiaon 5. Release the right mouse bupon and you see some opaons. 6. Select Copy here as values only CHAPTER 1: MOUSE TIPS & TRICKS PAGE 17 OF 27

Converting a whole column or row of formulas is fast using this mouse method once you practice it a few times. Part 3 of 3 Keyboard shortcuts for converting formulas into values Note on Keyboard Shortcuts for Trick 20 Keyboard enthusiasts will say it s faster to convert formulas to values with keyboard shortcuts, and I m not going to argue as I am also a keyboard enthusiast! Ignore the next bit if you don t like keyboard shortcuts. Where you see CTRL + ALT + V to paste special this is available in Excel 2010 - in earlier Excel versions use the key combination ALT E S V To replace the whole column with values: 1. CTRL + Space to select the whole column 2. CTRL + C to copy 3. CTRL + ALT + V to bring up the paste special dialog box 4. V to select paste as values 5. Enter to close the paste special dialog box To replace the whole row with values: 1. SHIFT + Space to select the whole row 2. CTRL + C to copy 3. CTRL + ALT + V to bring up the paste special dialog box 4. V to select paste as values 5. Enter to close the paste special dialog box To replace the current region with values: 1. CTRL + SHIFT + 8 to select the current region 2. CTRL + C to copy 3. CTRL + ALT + V to bring up the paste special dialog box 4. V to select paste as values 5. Enter to close the paste special dialog box CHAPTER 1: MOUSE TIPS & TRICKS PAGE 18 OF 27

2 Excel Data Entry In this chapter we look at data entry and check out some important tips and shortcuts that everyone using Excel should learn. You ll find these data entry tips handy whether you work with short to-do lists, stacks of survey results or a prolific pile of personnel data. You ll get more effective at entering data. Remember that you will find even more data entry tips in the full edition of Power Tips. In this preview edition we show you how to: Get Excel to speak to you Freeze Panes Split Windows Use Excel Tables (Excel 2007+) Share by e-mail Post to Facebook Share on LinkedIn Tweet the link Like the preview edition of Power Tips? Remember to share it with your friends and colleagues via e-mail and social media. Here is the download link you can share: http://www.launchexcel.com/power-tips-for-excel-preview CHAPTER 2: EXCEL DATA ENTRY PAGE 19 OF 27

Section 2 Excel Can Speak! Get Excel to say numbers Make the process of manually typing numbers less error-prone by getting Excel to speak to you as you type. You ll have your very own personal proof-reader. Tip 6. Get Excel to speak to you The problem If you find yourself transferring numbers from paper to Excel or from a graphical PDF document to Excel, you might try using OCR (optical character recognition) but often the resulting file is error filled and formatted in such a way that it would take you longer to fix the errors and formatting than to just type in the numbers manually. The solution It s possible to make the process of manually typing numbers less error-prone by getting Excel to speak to you as you type. This is one of my favorite tips for data entry. Rather than constantly switching from the Excel to the data, then back again to Excel, using Speak Cells on Enter means you can keep entering data and let Excel tell you whether you got it right or not. To use this command you need to add a custom button to the Quick Access Toolbar (Excel 2007 / 2010) 1. Right- click the Quick Access Toolbar (QAT) 2. Choose Customize Quick Access Toolbar 3. set Choose commands from: to Commands Not in the Ribbon 4. Click in the list of commands and press the S key to go to commands beginning with S 5. Scroll down to the Speak commands 6. Select Speak Cells on Enter and Add it to your Quick Access Toolbar 7. You can reposiaon it where you want using the Up / Down arrow keys 8. Click OK to save the se]ngs or Cancel to reject the changes Press the button Speak Cells on Enter to start speaking as you enter data and press it again to stop Excel speaking. CHAPTER 2: EXCEL DATA ENTRY PAGE 20 OF 27

Have Fun with Excel Here are two ideas on what to do with the Excel Speak feature when you re bored with data entry: Idea 1 - Paste numerous children's poems into cells and get your child, preferably aged 4-6, by the computer and ask him/her to hit the Enter-key when the computer finishes each poem. (This tip comes from Excel Trainer Rob Wantling - thanks Rob) Idea 2 - Here is a prank or April fool s joke you can play if someone leaves their computer unlocked. Add the button Speak Cells on Enter to the Quick Access Toolbar and turn on the feature. Remove the button Speak Cells on Enter from the Quick Access Toolbar but don t turn off the speech feature. When they get back to their computer they won t know how to stop Excel speaking unless of course they know how to find this well-hidden command! Put them out of their misery and recommend they buy a copy of this Ebook from www.launchexcel.com! The Speak Cells on Enter feature is accompanied by several related features that you can play with: Speak Cells / Stop Speaking Cells Speak Cells by Columns Speak Cells by Rows Hey! Excel doesn t stop talking! Tip: If you work in an office with other people, put headphones on to stop annoying everyone within earshot of your computer! CHAPTER 2: EXCEL DATA ENTRY PAGE 21 OF 27

Section 4 Keep Data Headings Visible Data Headings When you have data that doesn t fit a single screen you need to find a way to keep your data headings in view while you scroll up and down. Tip 8. Freeze Panes The Freeze Panes command lets you freeze parts of a worksheet, usually column and row headings, so that you can scroll to other parts of the worksheet while the headings stay visible. Excel gives you at least 3 ways to keep your data headings visible: Freeze Panes (Tip 8) Split Window (Tip 9) Excel Table (Tip 10) How to Freeze Panes in Excel 2007 / 2010: 1. PosiAon the acave cell based on what you want to freeze. 2. On the Excel Ribbon choose VIEW FREEZE PANES 3. Select from: (a) Freeze Panes, (b) Freeze Top Row, (c) Freeze First Column 4. You ll know the command has worked when you can see a thin black line that separates the different secaons. 5. When you scroll down and/or right you will see that the columns above and rows to the lec of where you selected to freeze panes will remain fixed. CHAPTER 2: EXCEL DATA ENTRY PAGE 22 OF 27

Keyboard Shortcuts In Excel 2007 / 2010 you can also use the keyboard shortcut ALT W F F to freeze panes. Two thin black lines separate the different frozen panes, one is to the right of column C and one is below row 3. These disappear when you unfreeze panes. Freeze Panes with the keyboard shortcut ALT W F F CTRL + HOME Usually when you are in any worksheet, pressing CTRL + HOME takes you to cell A1. But With Freeze Panes active, pressing CTRL + HOME takes you to the cell just below and to the right of the black freeze pane lines. You can use your arrow keys or click your mouse to access cells inside the frozen panes. To unfreeze panes from the Ribbon, choose VIEW FREEZE PANES Unfreeze Panes CHAPTER 2: EXCEL DATA ENTRY PAGE 23 OF 27

9. Split Window (ALT W S) You split the worksheet window into separate panes and scroll the worksheet in each pane to help you compare data from two separate places on the same worksheet. Split Windows is similar to freeze panes but gives you more flexibility. Split Window with the keyboard shortcut ALT W S How to Split the Window in Excel 2007 / 2010: 1. PosiAon the acave cell based on where you want to split the window. 2. On the Excel Ribbon choose VIEW SPLIT (this is a toggle bupon, so to turn off SPLIT you just click the same bupon again) 3. You ll know the command has worked when you can see a think gray divider that separates the different secaons. In Excel 2007 / 2010 you can use keyboard shortcut ALT W S to toggle split window. You can also make the panes in a workbook window disappear by double-clicking anywhere on the split bar that divides the window. And you can reposition the split bar by dragging it to a new position. CHAPTER 2: EXCEL DATA ENTRY PAGE 24 OF 27

Excel 2007 introduced Tables as extensions to Lists and they offer many great features: Dynamic resizing Toggle automatic totals Quickly create banded rows / columns Excel 2010 added an interactive search filter to help you explore large data sets. 10. Use Excel Table (CTRL + T to add table) Tables were introduced in Excel 2007 as an extension to Lists, and they are one of the most significant new additions to Excel 2007. A Table is similar to a range but includes many new features. Among my favorite features of Tables are: Tables will dynamically grow and shrink as you add more rows of data, so you can create a chart from the Table and have the source range dynamically grow and shrink without writing any complex formulas. When you get to the last cell in the table press TAB to automatically create a new row. And you can add an automatic Total Row to any Table. You can quickly customize the Table style to include banded rows and banded columns, again without any tricky conditional formatting formulas. Each Table has its own set of filters, which means you can have multiple filters on one worksheet. In previous versions of Excel with the AutoFilter feature, you could only apply one set of filters on any one worksheet. Excel 2010 introduced search as a way to interact with filters. Excel users sometimes work with huge data tables and these were difficult to explore in previous versions of Excel as all the items of the filter field were displayed in the filter dropdown. In Excel 2010 you simply type in a search term and can quickly explore the data set based on searching for your desired term instead of selecting or deselecting items. Shortcuts for Tables You can use the shortcut CTRL + T to insert a Table. Alternatively type ALT N T. To insert a row use CTRL + or press Tab in the last cell to add a new row at the end. To delete a row first use SHIFT + Space to select the row then CTRL - to delete it When you create a formula in a blank column within a Table Excel will autofill the whole column with your formula. And every new column is automatically given a column header. CHAPTER 2: EXCEL DATA ENTRY PAGE 25 OF 27

Tables allow you to keep column headings in view at all times. They are also a great way to maintain source data for Pivot Tables. Why talk about Tables in this Section about Keeping Data headings visible? The nice thing about Tables is that they allow you to keep your column headings in view at all times when you scroll down past the first screen of data. When you view a large Table that does not fit on one screen, you start off at the top of the table with no difficult reading the column headings because they are in the visible part of your spreadsheet. In this screenshot column headings are on row 3: But what happens when you scroll down? Yes the column headings are kept in view.and they actually appear in place of the normal Excel column headings A, B, C, D, E, F and so on. Note that you must select a cell inside the Table for this to work. Once you click outside the Table the normal Excel column headings return. CHAPTER 2: EXCEL DATA ENTRY PAGE 26 OF 27

Get the full version for more tips... Head over to the Launch Excel Store and pick up the full edition. Hello - you ve reached the end of the sample preview edition. I hope you enjoyed this free preview. I invite you to share this preview edition with as many people as you want via e-mail and social media. Here is the download link to share: http://www.launchexcel.com/power-tips-for-excel-preview Drop by the Launch Excel Store to pick up the full version. After trying out the tips in this free preview edition you should find that your productivity in Excel is improved. But don t forget that Microsoft Excel is an incredibly flexible and powerful platform for creating analysis and models, and there is always more for you to learn. To continue your learning journey, we recommend you buy a copy of the Premium edition of Power Tips from the Launch Excel store. The Premium edition has video tutorials to give you a richer learning experience, and also comes with a progress checklist to help you track which tips you have learned. Find out more about the full product at the Launch Excel Store today: Visit the Launch Excel Store by clicking here. Cheers and here s to your progress in Microsoft Excel! MICROSOFT EXCEL POWER TIPS EBOOK PAGE 27 OF 27