Basics of Excel Please sit in the back if you are inexperienced with

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Basics of Excel Please sit in the back if you are inexperienced with Excel—Heather will be there to help

2 Worksheets Excel’s main screen is called a “worksheet”. Each worksheet is comprised of many boxes, called “cells”.

3 Selecting a Cell “Select” a cell by clicking on it once (don’t double click). You can move from cell to cell with the arrow keys.

4 Entering Information / The Formula Bar To enter information in a cell, just start typing. When you are done either – Press the Enter Key – Press an arrow key The information in the selected cell is also displayed in the “formula bar” above the worksheet.

5 Double Click to Modify a Cell Double click to change “hi there” to “hello there”

Column Names (letters) & Row Names (numbers) The columns of the worksheet are named with letters The rows are named with numbers Selected Cell 6

7 Cell Names (ex. B4) The name of a cell is a combination of the Letter Of The Column that the cell is in followed by the Number Of The Row that the cell is in. Example: the selected cell in the picture is named B4 (NOT 4B) Excel automatically shows the the name of the currently selected cell in the “name box” (located above the worksheet). Name Box Selected Cell

8 Excel Formulas You must have an equals sign ( ) as the first character in a cell that contains a formula. The sign tells excel that the contents of the cell is a formula Without the sign, the formula will not calculate anything. It will simply display the text of the formula.

9 Formulas - correct formula with sign After pressing ENTER

10 Missing sign Missing sign! Before pressing enter After pressing ENTER (no change - not a formula)

11 Types of operations You can use any of the following operations in a formula: operation addition: subtraction: multiplication: division: exponentiation symbol * / example a1 3 100-b3 a1*b1 d1/100 a2 2

12 Explicit values and cell references You can use both explicit values and cell references in a formula: – Formula with only cell references: a1*b1 – Formula with only literal values: 100/27 – Formula with both cell references and literal values: a1/100

13 The SUM function Examples Function SUM(1,2,3,4,5) SUM(a1,b1,c1) SUM(9,a1,b2,5,c1) Result 15 a1 b1 c1 9 a1 b2 5 c1

Ranges A rectangular box of cells is called a “range”. The name of a range is – the name of the upper left cell of the range – Followed by a colon : – Followed by the lower right cell of the range Example: A1:B2 is shorthand for A1,A2,B1,B2 – See next slide for more examples A1:B2 14

Examples of Range Names C3:E10 B2:B5 B3:E3 15

16 Summing a range Both of the following function calls produce the same result as a1 b1 c1 a2 b2 c2 a3 b3 c3 a4 b4 c4 however the 2nd version uses a range and is much shorter. without a range SUM(a1,b1,c1,a2,b2,c2,a3,b3,c3,a4,b4,c4) with a range SUM(a1:c4)

17 Relative Cell References By default, when you copy a formula that contains a cell reference, excel will automatically adjust the cell reference.

18 Relative Cell References D9 This is a "relative cell reference". – Changing the column: If I copy this cell reference to another cell: the "d" will increment one letter for every cell that I move over to the right The "d" will decrement one letter for every cell that I move over to the left – Changing the row: If I copy this cell reference to another cell: the "9" will increment by one for every cell that I move down The "9" will decrement by one for every cell that I move up

Go to course website: http://umn.edu/ ruggles/hist3797

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