Tutorial Regz
Tutorial Regz
Microsoft Excel is an electronic spreadsheet. As with a paper spreadsheet, you can use Excel to
organize your data into rows and columns and to perform mathematical calculations. The tutorial
teaches you how to create an Excel spreadsheet.
Microsoft Excel is an electronic spreadsheet. You can use it to organize your data into rows and
columns. You can also use it to perform mathematical calculations quickly. This tutorial teaches
Microsoft Excel basics. Although knowledge of how to navigate in a Windows environment is
helpful, this tutorial was created for the computer novice.
This lesson will introduce you to the Excel window. You use the window to interact with Excel.
To begin this lesson, start Microsoft Excel 2007. The Microsoft Excel window appears and your
screen looks similar to the one shown here.
Note: Your screen will probably not look exactly like the screen shown. In Excel 2007, how a
window displays depends on the size of your window, the size of your monitor, and the
resolution to which your monitor is set. Resolution determines how much information your
computer monitor can display. If you use a low resolution, less information fits on your screen,
but the size of your text and images are larger. If you use a high resolution, more information fits
on your screen, but the size of the text and images are smaller. Also, settings in Excel 2007,
Windows Vista, and Windows XP allow you to change the color and style of your windows.
Next to the Microsoft Office button is the Quick Access toolbar. The Quick Access toolbar gives
you with access to commands you frequently use. By default, Save, Undo, and Redo appear on
the Quick Access toolbar. You can use Save to save your file, Undo to roll back an action you
have taken, and Redo to reapply an action you have rolled back.
Next to the Quick Access toolbar is the Title bar. On the Title bar, Microsoft Excel displays the
name of the workbook you are currently using. At the top of the Excel window, you should see
"Microsoft Excel - Book1" or a similar name.
The Ribbon
You use commands to tell Microsoft Excel what to do. In Microsoft Excel 2007, you use the
Ribbon to issue commands. The Ribbon is located near the top of the Excel window, below the
Quick Access toolbar. At the top of the Ribbon are several tabs; clicking a tab displays several
related command groups. Within each group are related command buttons. You click buttons to
issue commands or to access menus and dialog boxes. You may also find a dialog box launcher
in the bottom-right corner of a group. When you click the dialog box launcher, a dialog box
makes additional commands available.
Worksheets
Microsoft Excel consists of worksheets. Each worksheet contains columns and rows. The
columns are lettered A to Z and then continuing with AA, AB, AC and so on; the rows are
numbered 1 to 1,048,576. The number of columns and rows you can have in a worksheet is
limited by your computer memory and your system resources.
The combination of a column coordinate and a row coordinate make up a cell address. For
example, the cell located in the upper-left corner of the worksheet is cell A1, meaning column A,
row 1. Cell E10 is located under column E on row 10. You enter your data into the cells on the
worksheet.
Formula Bar
If the Formula bar is turned on, the cell address of the cell you are in displays in the Name box
which is located on the left side of the Formula bar. Cell entries display on the right side of the
Formula bar. If you do not see the Formula bar in your window, perform the following steps:
Note: The current cell address displays on the left side of the Formula bar.
The Status bar appears at the very bottom of the Excel window and provides such information as
the sum, average, minimum, and maximum value of selected numbers. You can change what
displays on the Status bar by right-clicking on the Status bar and selecting the options you want
from the Customize Status Bar menu. You click a menu item to select it. You click it again to
deselect it. A check mark next to an item means the item is selected.
By using the arrow keys, you can move around your worksheet. You can use the down arrow key
to move downward one cell at a time. You can use the up arrow key to move upward one cell at
a time. You can use the Tab key to move across the page to the right, one cell at a time. You can
hold down the Shift key and then press the Tab key to move to the left, one cell at a time. You
can use the right and left arrow keys to move right or left one cell at a time. The Page Up and
Page Down keys move up and down one page at a time. If you hold down the Ctrl key and then
press the Home key, you move to the beginning of the worksheet.
EXERCISE 1
Press the down arrow key several times. Note that the cursor moves downward one cell at a
time.
Press the up arrow key several times. Note that the cursor moves upward one cell at a time.
Hold down the Shift key and then press Tab. Note that the cursor moves to the left one cell at a
time.
1. Press the right arrow key several times. Note that the cursor moves to the right.
2. Press the left arrow key several times. Note that the cursor moves to the left.
1. Press the Page Down key. Note that the cursor moves down one page.
2. Press the Page Up key. Note that the cursor moves up one page.
Go To Cells Quickly
The following are shortcuts for moving quickly from one cell in a worksheet to a cell in a
different part of the worksheet.
EXERCISE 2
Go to -- F5
The F5 function key is the "Go To" key. If you press the F5 key, you are prompted for the cell to
which you wish to go. Enter the cell address, and the cursor jumps to that cell.
Go to -- Ctrl+G
1. Hold down the Ctrl key while you press "g" (Ctrl+g). The Go To dialog box opens.
2. Type C4 in the Reference field.
3. Press Enter. Excel moves to cell C4.
Select Cells
If you wish to perform a function on a group of cells, you must first select those cells by
highlighting them. The exercises that follow teach you how to select.
EXERCISE 3
Select Cells
1. Go to cell A1.
2. Press the F8 key. This anchors the cursor.
3. Note that "Extend Selection" appears on the Status bar in the lower-left corner of the window.
You are in the Extend mode.
4. Click in cell E7. Excel highlights cells A1 to E7.
5. Press Esc and click anywhere on the worksheet to clear the highlighting.
You can also select an area by holding down the left mouse button and dragging the mouse over
the area. In addition, you can select noncontiguous areas of the worksheet by doing the
following:
1. Go to cell A1.
2. Hold down the Ctrl key. You won't release it until step 9. Holding down the Ctrl key enables you
to select noncontiguous areas of the worksheet.
3. Press the left mouse button.
4. While holding down the left mouse button, use the mouse to move from cell A1 to C5.
5. Continue to hold down the Ctrl key, but release the left mouse button.
6. Using the mouse, place the cursor in cell D7.
7. Press the left mouse button.
8. While holding down the left mouse button, move to cell F10. Release the left mouse button.
9. Release the Ctrl key. Cells A1 to C5 and cells D7 to F10 are selected.
10. Press Esc and click anywhere on the worksheet to remove the highlighting.
Enter Data
In this section, you will learn how to enter data into your worksheet. First, place the cursor in the
cell in which you want to start entering data. Type some data, and then press Enter. If you need
to delete, press the Backspace key to delete one character at a time.
EXERCISE 4
Enter Data
Edit a Cell
After you enter data into a cell, you can edit the data by pressing F2 while you are in the cell you
wish to edit.
EXERCISE 5
Edit a Cell
You can also edit the cell by using the Formula bar. You change "Jones" to "Joker" in the
following exercise.
1. Move the cursor to cell A1.
2. Click in the formula area of the Formula bar.
3. Use the backspace key to erase the "s," "e," and "n."
4. Type ker.
5. Press Enter.
Typing in a cell replaces the old cell entry with the new information you type.
Wrap Text
When you type text that is too long to fit in the cell, the text overlaps the next cell. If you do not
want it to overlap the next cell, you can wrap the text.
EXERCISE 6
Wrap Text
To delete an entry in a cell or a group of cells, you place the cursor in the cell or select the group
of cells and press Delete.
EXERCISE 7
Save a File
Close Excel
In Microsoft Excel, you can specify the direction the cursor moves when you press the Enter key.
In the exercises that follow, the cursor must move down one cell when you press Enter. You can
use the Direction box in the Excel Options pane to set the cursor to move up, down, left, right, or
not at all. Perform the steps that follow to set the cursor to move down when you press the Enter
key.
In Microsoft Excel, you can enter numbers and mathematical formulas into cells. Whether you
enter a number or a formula, you can reference the cell when you perform mathematical
calculations such as addition, subtraction, multiplication, or division. When entering a
mathematical formula, precede the formula with an equal sign. Use the following to indicate the
type of calculation you wish to perform:
+ Addition
- Subtraction
* Multiplication
/ Division
^ Exponential
In the following exercises, you practice some of the methods you can use to move around a
worksheet and you learn how to perform mathematical calculations. Refer to Lesson 1 to learn
more about moving around a worksheet.
EXERCISE 1
Addition
1. Type Add in cell A1.
2. Press Enter. Excel moves down one cell.
3. Type 1 in cell A2.
4. Press Enter. Excel moves down one cell.
5. Type 1 in cell A3.
6. Press Enter. Excel moves down one cell.
7. Type =A2+A3 in cell A4.
8. Click the check mark on the Formula bar. Excel adds cell A1 to cell A2 and displays the
result in cell A4. The formula displays on the Formula bar.
Note: Clicking the check mark on the Formula bar is similar to pressing Enter. Excel records
your entry but does not move to the next cell.
Subtraction
Multiplication
1. Hold down the Ctrl key while you press "g" (Ctrl+g). The Go To dialog box appears.
2. Type C1 in the Reference field.
3. Press Enter. Excel moves to cell C1
4. Type Multiply.
5. Press Enter. Excel moves down one cell.
6. Type 2 in cell C2.
7. Press Enter. Excel moves down one cell.
8. Type 3 in cell C3.
9. Press Enter. Excel moves down one cell.
10. Type =C2*C3 in cell C4.
11. Click the check mark on the Formula bar. Excel multiplies C1 by cell C2 and displays the
result in cell C3. The formula displays on the Formula bar.
Division
1. Press F5.
2. Type D1 in the Reference field.
3. Press Enter. Excel moves to cell D1.
4. Type Divide.
5. Press Enter. Excel moves down one cell.
6. Type 6 in cell D2.
7. Press Enter. Excel moves down one cell.
8. Type 3 in cell D3.
9. Press Enter. Excel moves down one cell.
10. Type =D2/D3 in cell D4.
11. Click the check mark on the Formula bar. Excel divides cell D2 by cell D3 and displays
the result in cell D4. The formula displays on the Formula bar.
When creating formulas, you can reference cells and include numbers. All of the following
formulas are valid:
=A2/B2
=A1+12-B3
=A2*B2+12
=24+53
AutoSum
You can use the AutoSum button on the Home tab to automatically add a column or row of
numbers. When you press the AutoSum button , Excel selects the numbers it thinks you want
to add. If you then click the check mark on the Formula bar or press the Enter key, Excel adds
the numbers. If Excel's guess as to which numbers you want to add is wrong, you can select the
cells you want.
EXERCISE 2
AutoSum
1. Go to cell F1.
2. Type 3.
3. Press Enter. Excel moves down one cell.
4. Type 3.
5. Press Enter. Excel moves down one cell.
6. Type 3.
7. Press Enter. Excel moves down one cell to cell F4.
8. Choose the Home tab.
9. Click the AutoSum button in the Editing group. Excel selects cells F1 through F3 and
enters a formula in cell F4.
10. Press Enter. Excel adds cells F1 through F3 and displays the result in cell F4.
By default, Microsoft Excel recalculates the worksheet as you change cell entries. This makes it
easy for you to correct mistakes and analyze a variety of scenarios.
EXERCISE 3
Automatic Calculation
Make the changes described below and note how Microsoft Excel automatically recalculates.
When you type text into a cell, by default your entry aligns with the left side of the cell. When
you type numbers into a cell, by default your entry aligns with the right side of the cell. You can
change the cell alignment. You can center, left-align, or right-align any cell entry. Look at cells
A1 to D1. Note that they are aligned with the left side of the cell.
EXERCISE 4
Center
Left-Align
Right-Align
Note: You can also change the alignment of cells with numbers in them by using the alignment
buttons.
EXERCISE 5
Advanced Calculations
Note: Microsoft Excel divides 12 by 2, multiplies the answer by 4, adds 3, and then adds another
3. The answer, 30, displays in cell A7.
To change the order of calculation, use parentheses. Microsoft Excel calculates the information
in parentheses first.
Note: Microsoft Excel adds 3 plus 3 plus 12, divides the answer by 2, and then multiplies the
result by 4. The answer, 36, displays in cell A7.
In Excel, you can copy data from one area of a worksheet and place the data you copied
anywhere in the same or another worksheet. In other words, after you type information into a
worksheet, if you want to place the same information somewhere else, you do not have to retype
the information. You simple copy it and then paste it in the new location.
You can use Excel's Cut feature to remove information from a worksheet. Then you can use the
Paste feature to place the information you cut anywhere in the same or another worksheet. In
other words, you can move information from one place in a worksheet to another place in the
same or different worksheet by using the Cut and Paste features.
Microsoft Excel records cell addresses in formulas in three different ways, called absolute,
relative, and mixed. The way a formula is recorded is important when you copy it. With relative
cell addressing, when you copy a formula from one area of the worksheet to another, Excel
records the position of the cell relative to the cell that originally contained the formula. With
absolute cell addressing, when you copy a formula from one area of the worksheet to another,
Excel references the same cells, no matter where you copy the formula. You can use mixed cell
addressing to keep the row constant while the column changes, or vice versa. The following
exercises demonstrate.
EXERCISE 6
In addition to typing a formula as you did in Lesson 1, you can also enter formulas by using
Point mode. When you are in Point mode, you can enter a formula either by clicking on a cell or
by using the arrow keys.
Compare the formula in cell A12 with the formula in cell B12 (while in the respective cell, look
at the Formula bar). The formulas are the same except that the formula in cell A12 sums the
entries in column A and the formula in cell B12 sums the entries in column B. The formula was
copied in a relative fashion.
Before proceeding with the next part of the exercise, you must copy the information in cells A7
to B9 to cells C7 to D9. This time you will copy by using the Mini toolbar.
1. Select cells A9 to B11. Move to cell A9. Press the Shift key. While holding down the
Shift key, press the down arrow key twice. Press the right arrow key once. Excel
highlights A9 to B11.
2. Right-click. A context menu and a Mini toolbar appear.
3. Click Copy, which is located on the context menu. Excel copies the information in cells
A9 to B11.
4. Move to cell C9.
5. Right-click. A context menu appears.
6. Click Paste. Excel copies the contents of cells A9 to B11 to cells C9 to C11.
You make a cell address an absolute cell address by placing a dollar sign in front of the row and
column identifiers. You can do this automatically by using the F4 key. To illustrate:
Keyboard shortcuts are key combinations that enable you to perform tasks by using the
keyboard. Generally, you press and hold down a key while pressing a letter. For example, Ctrl+c
means you should press and hold down the Ctrl key while pressing "c." This tutorial notates key
combinations as follows:
Press Ctrl+c.
Now copy the formula from C12 to D12. This time, copy by using keyboard shortcuts.
Compare the formula in cell C12 with the formula in cell D12 (while in the respective cell, look
at the Formula bar). The formulas are exactly the same. Excel copied the formula from cell C12
to cell D12. Excel copied the formula in an absolute fashion. Both formulas sum column C.
You use mixed cell addressing to reference a cell when you want to copy part of it absolute and
part relative. For example, the row can be absolute and the column relative. You can use the F4
key to create a mixed cell reference.
5. Click the Paste button . Excel moves the contents of cells D9 to D12 to cells G1 to
G4.
The keyboard shortcut for Cut is Ctrl+x. The steps for cutting and pasting with a keyboard
shortcut are:
You can insert and delete columns and rows. When you delete a column, you delete everything
in the column from the top of the worksheet to the bottom of the worksheet. When you delete a
row, you delete the entire row from left to right. Inserting a column or row inserts a completely
new column or row.
EXERCISE 7
To insert a column:
To insert rows:
1. Click on 1 and then drag down to 2 to select rows 1 and 2.
2. Click the down arrow next to Insert in the Cells group. A menu appears.
3. Click Insert Sheet Rows. Excel inserts two new rows.
4. Click anywhere on the worksheet to remove your selection.
Create Borders
You can use borders to make entries in your Excel worksheet stand out. You can choose from
several types of borders. When you press the down arrow next to the Border button ,a
menu appears. By making the proper selection from the menu, you can place a border on the top,
bottom, left, or right side of the selected cells; on all sides; or around the outside border. You can
have a thick outside border or a border with a single-line top and a double-line bottom.
Accountants usually place a single underline above a final number and a double underline below.
The following illustrates:
EXERCISE 8
Create Borders
Sometimes, particularly when you give a title to a section of your worksheet, you will want to
center a piece of text over several columns or rows. The following example shows you how.
EXERCISE 9
To make a section of your worksheet stand out, you can add background color to a cell or group
of cells.
EXERCISE 10
A font is a set of characters represented in a single typeface. Each character within a font is
created by using the same basic style. Excel provides many different fonts from which you can
choose. The size of a font is measured in points. There are 72 points to an inch. The number of
points assigned to a font is based on the distance from the top to the bottom of its longest
character. You can change the Font, Font Size, and Font Color of the data you enter into Excel.
EXERCISE 11
In Microsoft Excel, each workbook is made up of several worksheets. Each worksheet has a tab.
By default, a workbook has three sheets and they are named sequentially, starting with Sheet1.
The name of the worksheet appears on the tab. Before moving to the next topic, move to a new
worksheet. The exercise that follows shows you how.
EXERCISE 12
Click Sheet2 in the lower-left corner of the screen. Excel moves to Sheet2.
Bold, Italicize, and Underline
When creating an Excel worksheet, you may want to emphasize the contents of cells by bolding,
italicizing, and/or underlining. You can easily bold, italicize, or underline text with Microsoft
Excel. You can also combine these features—in other words, you can bold, italicize, and
underline a single piece of text.
In the exercises that follow, you will learn different methods you can use to bold, italicize, and
underline.
EXERCISE 13
Microsoft Excel provides two types of underlines. The exercises that follow illustrate them.
Single Underline:
Double Underline
1. Type Italic in cell B2. Note: Because you previously entered the word Italic in column
B, Excel may enter the word in the cell automatically after you type the letter I. Excel
does this to speed up your data entry.
2. Click the check mark located on the Formula bar.
3. Hold down the Ctrl key while pressing "i" (Ctrl+i). Excel italicizes the contents of the
cell.
4. Press Ctrl+i again if you wish to remove the italic formatting.
Whenever you type text that is too long to fit into a cell, Microsoft Excel attempts to display all
the text. It left-aligns the text regardless of the alignment you have assigned to it, and it borrows
space from the blank cells to the right. However, a long text entry will never write over cells that
already contain entries—instead, the cells that contain entries cut off the long text. The following
exercise illustrates this.
EXERCISE 14
You can increase column widths. Increasing the column width enables you to see the long text.
EXERCISE 15
You can also change the column width with the cursor.
1. Place the mouse pointer on the line between the B and C column headings. The mouse
pointer should look like the one displayed here , with two arrows.
2. Move your mouse to the right while holding down the left mouse button. The width
indicator appears on the screen.
3. Release the left mouse button when the width indicator shows approximately 20. Excel
increases the column width to 20.
Format Numbers
You can format the numbers you enter into Microsoft Excel. For example, you can add commas
to separate thousands, specify the number of decimal places, place a dollar sign in front of a
number, or display a number as a percent.
EXERCISE 16
Format Numbers
This is the end of Lesson 2. You can save and close your file. See Lesson 1 to learn how to save
and close a file.
Excel Functions
You can use Excel functions to perform mathematical calculations. This Microsoft Excel tutorial
teaches you how to create and use Excel functions. It takes you step-by-step through the process.
To use functions, you need to understand reference operators. Reference operators refer to a cell
or a group of cells. There are two types of reference operators: range and union.
A range reference refers to all the cells between and including the reference. A range reference
consists of two cell addresses separated by a colon. The reference A1:A3 includes cells A1, A2,
and A3. The reference A1:C3 includes cells A1, A2, A3, B1, B2, B3, C1, C2, and C3.
A union reference includes two or more references. A union reference consists of two or more
numbers, range references, or cell addresses separated by a comma. The reference
A7,B8:B10,C9,10 refers to cells A7, B8 to B10, C9 and the number 10.
Understanding Functions
Functions are prewritten formulas. Functions differ from regular formulas in that you supply the
value but not the operators, such as +, -, *, or /. For example, you can use the SUM function to
add. When using a function, remember the following:
Enclose arguments within parentheses. Arguments are values on which you want to perform the
calculation. For example, arguments specify the numbers or cells you want to add.
=SUM(2,13,A1,B2:C7)
In this function:
After you type the first letter of a function name, the AutoComplete list appears. You can
double-click on an item in the AutoComplete list to complete your entry quickly. Excel will
complete the function name and enter the first parenthesis.
EXERCISE 1
Functions
12. Type C1:C3 in the Number1 field, if it does not automatically appear.
13. Click OK. The sum of cells C1 to C3, which is 300, appears.
Format worksheet
Calculate an Average
You can use the AVERAGE function to calculate the average of a series of numbers.
In Microsoft Excel, you can use the AutoSum button to calculate an average.
Note: You can also use the drop-down button next to the AutoSum button to calculate
minimums, maximums, and counts.
You can use the MAX function to find the highest number in a series of numbers.
You can use the count function to count the number of numbers in a series.
1. Move to cell A9.
2. Type Count.
3. Press the right arrow key to move to cell B9.
4. Choose the Home tab.
5. Click the down arrow next to the AutoSum button .
6. Click Count Numbers. Excel places the count function in cell C9 and takes a guess at which cells
you want to count. The guess is incorrect, so you must select the proper cells.
7. Select B1 to B3.
8. Press Enter. The number of items in the series, which is 3, appears.
You can use Microsoft Excel to fill cells automatically with a series. For example, you can have
Excel automatically fill your worksheet with days of the week, months of the year, years, or
other types of series.
EXERCISE 2
1. Click the Auto Fill Options button. The Auto Fill Options menu appears.
2. Choose the Copy Cells radio button. The entry in cells A1 and B1 are copied to all the highlighted
cells.
3. Click the Auto Fill Options button again.
4. Choose the Fill Series radio button. The cells fill as a series from Sunday to Saturday again.
5. Click the Auto Fill Options button again.
6. Choose the Fill Without Formatting radio button. The cells fill as a series from Sunday to
Saturday, but the entries are not bolded.
7. Click the Auto Fill Options button again.
8. Choose the Fill Weekdays radio button. The cells fill as a series from Monday to Friday.
Some of the entries in column B are too long to fit in the column. You can quickly adjust the
column width to fit the longest entry.
1. Move your mouse pointer over the line that separates column B and C. The Width Indicator
appears.
2. Double-click. The Column adjusts to fit the longest entry.
After you complete the remainder of the exercise, your worksheet will look like the one shown
here.
Fill Times
Fill Numbers
1. Grab the fill handle and drag with your mouse to highlight cells D1 to D14. The number 1 fills
each cell.
2. Click the Auto Fill Options button.
3. Choose the Fill Series radio button. The cells fill as a series, starting with 1, 2, 3.
1. Go to cell E1.
2. Type Lesson 1.
3. Grab the fill handle and drag with your mouse to highlight cells E1 to E14. The cells fill in as a
series: Lesson 1, Lesson 2, Lesson 3, and so on.
Create Headers and Footers
You can use the Header & Footer button on the Insert tab to create headers and footers. A header
is text that appears at the top of every page of your printed worksheet. A footer is text that
appears at the bottom of every page of your printed worksheet. When you click the Header &
Footer button, the Design context tab appears and Excel changes to Page Layout view. A context
tab is a tab that only appears when you need it. Page Layout view structures your worksheet so
that you can easily change the format of your document. You usually work in Normal view.
You can type in your header or footer or you can use predefined headers and footers. To find
predefined headers and footers, click the Header or Footer button or use the Header & Footer
Elements group's buttons. When you choose a header or footer by clicking the Header or Footer
button, Excel centers your choice. The table shown here describes each of the Header & Footer
Elements group button options.
Button Purpose
Both the header and footer areas are divided into three sections: left, right, and center. When you
choose a Header or Footer from the Header & Footer Elements group, where you place your
information determines whether it appears on the left, right, or center of the printed page. You
use the Go To Header and Go To Footer buttons on the Design tab to move between the header
and footer areas of your worksheet.
EXERCISE 3
There are many print options. You set print options on the Page Layout tab. Among other things,
you can set your margins, set your page orientation, and select your paper size.
Margins define the amount of white space that appears on the top, bottom, left, and right edges of
your document. The Margin option on the Page Layout tab provides several standard margin
sizes from which you can choose.
There are two page orientations: portrait and landscape. Paper, such as paper sized 8 1/2 by 11, is
longer on one edge than it is on the other. If you print in Portrait, the shortest edge of the paper
becomes the top of the page. Portrait is the default option. If you print in Landscape, the longest
edge of the paper becomes the top of the page.
Portrait
Landscape
Paper comes in a variety of sizes. Most business correspondence uses 8 1/2 by 11 paper, which is
the default page size in Excel. If you are not using 8 1/2 by 11 paper, you can use the Size option
on the Page Layout tab to change the Size setting.
EXERCISE 4
The simplest way to print is to click the Office button, highlight Print on the menu that appears,
and then click Quick Print in the Preview and Print the Document pane. Dotted lines appear on
your screen, and your document prints. The dotted lines indicate the right, left, top, and bottom
edges of your printed pages.
You can also use the Print Preview option to print. When using Print Preview, you can see
onscreen how your printed document will look when you print it. If you click the Page Setup
button while in Print Preview mode, you can set page settings such as centering your data on the
page.
If your document is several pages long, you can use the Next Page and Previous Page buttons to
move forward and backward through your document. If you check the Show Margins check box,
you will see margin lines on your document. You can click and drag the margin markers to
increase or decrease the size of your margins. To return to Excel, click the Close Print Preview
button.
You click the Print button when you are ready to print. The Print dialog box appears. You can
choose to print the entire worksheet or specific pages. If you want to print specific pages, enter
the page numbers in the From and To fields. You can enter the number of copies you want to
print in the Number of Copies field.
EXERCISE 5
1. Click the Page Setup button in the Print group. The Page Setup dialog box appears.
2. Choose the Margins tab.
3. Click the Horizontally check box. Excel centers your data horizontally.
4. Click the Vertically check box. Excel centers your data vertically.
5. Click OK. The Page Setup dialog box closes.
Print
1. Click the Print button. The Print dialog box appears.
2. Click the down arrow next to the name field and select the printer to which you want to print.
3. Click OK. Excel sends your worksheet to the printer.
Lesson 4: Creating Charts
In Microsoft Excel, you can represent numbers in a chart. On the Insert tab, you can choose from
a variety of chart types, including column, line, pie, bar, area, and scatter. The basic procedure
for creating a chart is the same no matter what type of chart you choose. As you change your
data, your chart will automatically update.
You select a chart type by choosing an option from the Insert tab's Chart group. After you choose
a chart type, such as column, line, or bar, you choose a chart sub-type. For example, after you
choose Column Chart, you can choose to have your chart represented as a two-dimensional chart,
a three-dimensional chart, a cylinder chart, a cone chart, or a pyramid chart. There are further
sub-types within each of these categories. As you roll your mouse pointer over each option,
Excel supplies a brief description of each chart sub-type.
Create a Chart
To create the column chart shown above, start by creating the worksheet below exactly as
shown.
After you have created the worksheet, you are ready to create your chart.
EXERCISE 1
1. Select cells A3 to D6. You must select all the cells containing the data you want in your chart.
You should also include the data labels.
2. Choose the Insert tab.
3. Click the Column button in the Charts group. A list of column chart sub-types types appears.
4. Click the Clustered Column chart sub-type. Excel creates a Clustered Column chart and the Chart
Tools context tabs appear.
Context tabs are tabs that only appear when you need them. Called Chart Tools, there are three
chart context tabs: Design, Layout, and Format. The tabs become available when you create a
new chart or when you click on a chart. You can use these tabs to customize your chart.
You can determine what your chart displays by choosing a layout. For example, the layout you
choose determines whether your chart displays a title, where the title displays, whether your
chart has a legend, where the legend displays, whether the chart has axis labels and so on. Excel
provides several layouts from which you can choose.
EXERCISE 2
Add Labels
When you apply a layout, Excel may create areas where you can insert labels. You use labels to
give your chart a title or to label your axes. When you applied layout 5, Excel created label areas
for a title and for the vertical axis.
EXERCISE 3
Add labels
Before After
1. Select Chart Title. Click on Chart Title and then place your cursor before the C in Chart and hold
down the Shift key while you use the right arrow key to highlight the words Chart Title.
2. Type Toy Sales. Excel adds your title.
3. Select Axis Title. Click on Axis Title. Place your cursor before the A in Axis. Hold down the Shift
key while you use the right arrow key to highlight the words Axis Title.
4. Type Sales. Excel labels the axis.
5. Click anywhere on the chart to end your entry.
Switch Data
If you want to change what displays in your chart, you can switch from row data to column data
and vice versa.
EXERCISE 4
Switch Data
Before After
A style is a set of formatting options. You can use a style to change the color and format of your
chart. Excel 2007 has several predefined styles that you can use. They are numbered from left to
right, starting with 1, which is located in the upper-left corner.
EXERCISE 5
Change the Style of a Chart
When you click a chart, handles appear on the right and left sides, the top and bottom, and the
corners of the chart. You can drag the handles on the top and bottom of the chart to increase or
decrease the height of the chart. You can drag the handles on the left and right sides to increase
or decrease the width of the chart. You can drag the handles on the corners to increase or
decrease the size of the chart proportionally. You can change the position of a chart by clicking
on an unused area of the chart and dragging.
EXERCISE 6
By default, when you create a chart, Excel embeds the chart in the active worksheet. However,
you can move a chart to another worksheet or to a chart sheet. A chart sheet is a sheet dedicated
to a particular chart. By default Excel names each chart sheet sequentially, starting with Chart1.
You can change the name.
EXERCISE 7
Any change you can make to a chart that is embedded in a worksheet, you can also make to a
chart sheet. For example, you can change the chart type from a column chart to a bar chart.
EXERCISE 8
You have reached the end of Lesson 4. You can save and close your file.
7 Excel Error Messages You're Sick of Seeing (And
How to Fix Them)
We've all fallen victim to the little green arrow in upper-left hand corner of a cell before.
You know, that pesky little thing that Excel uses to indicate something has gone wrong?
In many cases, clicking on that arrow will pull up enough information for you to remedy
the problem at hand. Take a look:
But in other cases, you still can't seem to figure out what's gone wrong. For those
instances, we've provided the following list of common errors, explanations, and tips for
overcoming them. Dig in for the context you need to right your wrongs and get back on
the Excel saddle.
1) #VALUE!
Excel displays the #VALUE! error when it finds spaces, characters, or text in a formula
where it is expecting a number.
Excel requires formulas to contain numbers only and won't respond to formulas
associated with numbers, so it will show you an error is if you've included anything else.
2) #####
When you see ##### displayed in your cell, it can look a little scary. The good news is
that this simply means the column isn't wide enough to display the value you've
inputted. And that's any easy fix!
Click on the right border of the column header and increase the column width.
Pro Tip: You can double-click the right border of the header to automatically fit the
widest cell in that column.
3) #DIV/0!
When you see #DIV/0!, you are asking Excel to divide a formula by zero or an empty
cell. In the same way that this task wouldn't work if you were doing division by hand, or
on a calculator, it won't work in Excel either.
This error is pretty easy to resolve. Simply change the value of the cell to a value that is
not equal to 0 or add in a value if your cell was blank. Here's an example:
↓
In some cases, you might find that you're simply waiting for input in a particular cell.
Rather than including a "0" as a placeholder, and subsequently turning up a #DIV/0!
error, you can add a custom display message. Learn more about your alternative options
here.
4) #REF!
This one can sometimes be a little tricky to figure out, however Excel usually displays
#REF! when a formula references a cell that is not valid.
That means that you may have accidentally deleted or pasted over a cell that was used
in your formula. For example, let's say that the "Outcome" column references the
formula: =SUM(A2,B2,C2).
If we were to accidentally delete the "Number 2" column, we'd see this error:
How to Resolve This Error:
Before you paste over a set of cells make sure that there are no formulas that will be
affected. Also, when deleting cells it’s important to double check what formulas are
being referred in those cells.
Pro Tip: If you accidentally delete a few cells, you can click the Undo button on the
Quick Access Toolbar (or press CTRL+Z for PC / Command + Z for Mac ) to restore
them.
5) #NULL!
#NULL! errors occur when you specify an intersection of two areas that don't actually
intersect, or when an incorrect range operator is used.
To give you some additional context, here's how Excel reference operators work:
Range operator (semi colon): Defines a references to a range of cells.
Union operator (comma): Combines two references into a single
reference.
Intersection operator (space): Returns a reference to the intersection of
two ranges.
↓
How to Resolve This Error:
First things first, check to make sure that you are using the correct syntax in your
formula.
You should be using a colon to separate the first cell from the last cell
when you refer to a continuous range of cells in a formula.
On the other hand, you should be using a comma should when you refer
to two cells that don't intersect.
6) #N/A
When you see #N/A, this typically means that the numbers you are referring to in your
formula cannot be found.
You may have accidentally deleted a number or row that's being used in your formula,
or are referring to a sheet that was deleted or not saved.
For advanced users, one of the most common causes of the #N/A error is when a cell
can't be found from a formula referenced in a VLOOKUP. (Check out this post for more on
VLOOKUPs.)
How to Resolve This Error:
Triple check all your formulas and be sure to look closely at which sheets or rows may
have been deleted or incorrectly referenced. If you have a few formulas linked together,
check to see that everything in every formula has a value.
For example, when you're entering an Excel formula, make sure you don't include
values like $1,000 in currency format. Instead, enter 1000 and then format the cell with
currency and commas after the formula is calculated.
Check to see if you have entered any formatted currency, dates, or special symbols.
Then, make sure to remove those characters from the formula, only keeping the
numbers themselves.
Here's how you can format numbers after removing the commas and currency from your
formula:
(To adjust the currency, select the small triangle to the right of the icon to select an
option from the dropdown menu.)
Shortcut Keys in Microsoft Word
F1 key: Get help on a selected command or use the Office assistant.
Shift and F1 Key: Review text formatting.
F2 Key: Move text or image.
Shift + F2 Key: Copy text.
F3 Key: Insert an auto text entry.
Shift + F3 Key: Change the case of the selected text.
F4 Key: Perform last action again.
Shift + F4 Key: Perform a Find or Go To action again.
F5 Key: Displays the Go To dialogue box. You can also get to Find and Replace from here.
Shift + F5 Key: Move to a previous revision.
F6 Key: Go to the next frame or pane.
Shift + F6 Key: Go to the previous frame or pane.
F7 Key: Launch the Spell Checker.
Shift + F7 Key: Launch the Thesaurus.
F8 Key: Extend the current selection.
Shift + F8 Key: Shrink the current selection.
F9 Key: Refresh.
Shift + F9 Key: Switch between a field code and its result.
F10 Key: Show KeyTips.
Shift + F10 Key: Display a Shortcut Menu (same as right-clicking).
F11 Key: Go to the next field.
SHIFT + F11 Key: Go to the previous field..\/
F12 Key: Open Save As, equivalent to tools menu.
Shift + F12 Key: Save document, equivalent to tools menu.
Ctrl and A: Selects all in the current document.
Ctrl and B: Bold text.
Ctrl and C: Copies the item or text.
Ctrl and D: Displays the Font dialogue box.
Ctrl and E: Switch a paragraph between center and left alignment.
Ctrl and F: Displays the Find dialog box to search the current document.
Ctrl and G: Displays the Go To dialog box to search for a specific location in the current
document.
Ctrl and H: Displays the Replace dialogue box.
Ctrl and I: Italicize text.
Ctrl and J: Switch a paragraph between justified and left alignment.
Ctrl and K: Create a hyperlink.
Ctrl and L: Left align a paragraph.
Ctrl and M: Indent a paragraph from the left.
Ctrl and N: Create a new document.
Ctrl and O: Opens a new document.
Ctrl and P: Prints a document.
Ctrl and R: Switch the alignment of a paragraph between left and right.
Ctrl and S: Saves a document.
Ctrl and U: Underlines text.
Ctrl and V: Pastes the copied item or text.
Ctrl and X: Cuts the selected item or text.
Ctrl and Y: Redo the last action.
Ctrl and Z: Undo the last action.
Ctrl and Enter: Insert a page break.
Ctrl and F2: Select Print Preview command.
Ctrl and F4: Closes the active window.
Ctrl and F6: Opens the next window if multiple are open.
Ctrl + Enter: Adds www. at the beginning and .com to the end of any text entered in the
Address bar.
Alt + Down Arrow: Move a selected item down the favorites list.