Excel Roundup 20140331

Last week, three Office apps were released for the iPad – Excel, Word and Powerpoint. Have you downloaded any of the apps, and tried using them?

If you’re not sure whether to download them, you can read Ed Bott’s review of the new apps – he’s quite impressed by them. Bill Jelen (Mr. Excel) also reviewed the Excel app, and you can see his report here. Bill lists what’s in the apps, and what’s missing.

In the video below, there is a short interview with Han-Yi Shaw, head of Microsoft’s Office Design Studio. For more details, click here to read the Mashable interview.

Contextures Posts

Here’s what I posted last week:

  • You can create two types of formulas in a pivot table – calculated items and calculated fields. See what the differences are, and an example of how to use them.
  • Finally, for a humorous peek at what other people are saying about Excel, read this week’s collection of Excel tweets, on my Excel Theatre blog.

Other Excel Articles

Here are a few of the Excel articles that I read last week, that you might find useful:

  • Mynda Treacy shows how to plot missing dates in a pivot chart
  • Chandoo challenged us to solve an Excel problem, and find the products with the maximum change in monthly sales. There were 170 comments, with a wide variety of solutions.

Excel Resources

Here are some upcoming events, courses and new books, related to Excel.

  • Registration is open for the Amsterdam Excel Summit. The one-day event runs on May 14, 2014, and features sessions by several Excel MVPs, such as Bill Jelen (Mr. Excel), Ken Puls and Charles Williams. All the sessions are in English, and the limit is 100 participants, so sign up now, if you’re interested.

What Did You Read or Write?

If you read or wrote any other interesting Excel articles recently, that you’d like to share, please add a comment below, or send me an email.
Please include a brief description, and a link to the article.
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Screenshot – Excel for iPad
Excel for the iPad

Excel Roundup 20140324

You might have heard a thing or two about March Madness, even in you don’t live in the USA, and follow college basketball. David Ringstrom explains how to use Excel to manage March Madness.

marchmadness_ringstom

Contextures Posts

Here’s what I posted last week:

  • Finally, for a humorous peek at what other people are saying about Excel, read this week’s collection of Excel tweets, on my Excel Theatre blog.

Other Excel Articles

Here are a few of the Excel articles that I read last week, that you might find useful:

  • Jan Karel Pieterse has updated the Startup Problems page on his site, to include the new tool from Microsoft – Office Configuration Analyzer Tool (OffCAT)
  • The IT Portal shares 14 tips for intermediate Excel users. Do you know all of these? Good thing they saved those pie charts for the last tip, or I might not have made it to the end of the article
  • If you’re an Excel power user, you already know the 11 Excel tricks that PC World posted.

Excel Resources

Here are some upcoming events, courses and new books, related to Excel.

  • Registration is open for the Amsterdam Excel Summit. The one-day event runs on May 14, 2014, and features sessions by several Excel MVPs, such as Bill Jelen (Mr. Excel), Ken Puls and Charles Williams. All the sessions are in English, and the limit is 100 participants, so sign up now, if you’re interested.

What Did You Read or Write?

If you read or wrote any other interesting Excel articles recently, that you’d like to share, please add a comment below, or send me an email.

Please include a brief description, and a link to the article.

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Excel Roundup 20140317

imageHappy St. Patrick’s Day! Four years ago, we celebrated by creating Ireland’s flag in Excel.

The flag is a simple column chart, with the 3 columns coloured to match the flag’s design. It’s an easy project, so you’ll be done in time to go out to celebrate.

Irish flag in Excel blog.contextures.com/

The blog post also has a video of some festive Canadian Irish music, featuring Great Big Sea, playing with The Chieftains.

I’ve linked to it again this year, at the end of this post. The music will get your toes tapping, while you work on Excel projects today.

Contextures Posts

Here’s what I posted last week:

  • If the items in a pivot table Report Filter drop down are out of order, here’s how to sort them.
  • Finally, for a humorous peek at what other people are saying about Excel, read this week’s collection of Excel tweets, on my Excel Theatre blog.

Other Excel Articles

Here are a few of the Excel articles that I read last week, that you might find useful:

  • Did you read any of the articles that explained how Steve Ballmer, Microsoft’s former CEO, used Excel to balance his work and family time? He said “a spreadsheet”, but I’m sure he meant Excel. Or could he still be using MultiPlan?
  • Jon Acampora recommends the best keyboards if you like to use Excel’s keyboard shortcuts. My laptop looks like most of the “bad” pictures in the article.

Excel Resources

Here are some upcoming events, courses and new books, related to Excel.

  • Registration is open for the Amsterdam Excel Summit. The one-day event runs on May 14, 2014, and features sessions by several Excel MVPs, such as Bill Jelen (Mr. Excel), Ken Puls and Charles Williams. All the sessions are in English, and the limit is 100 participants, so sign up now, if you’re interested.

What Did You Read?

If you read (or wrote) any other interesting Excel articles recently, that you’d like to share, please add a comment below, or send me an email.
Please include a brief description, and a link to the article.

Toe Tapping Music

Here’s the video, to put you in the St. Patrick’s Day mood – Lukey, by Great Big Sea, with The Chieftains.


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Make an Irish flag in Excel blog.contextures.com/

Excel Roundup 20140310

Stay on top of things with Excel's Watch Window blog.contextures.com/Do you ever use the Watch window, to keep an eye on the results in one cell, while changing the data in another part of the workbook?

I used it last week, while working in a client’s price list file, where there was a multiplier on one sheet, and the final price on another sheet. After flipping back and forth between the worksheets a few times, I finally remembered the Watch window, and it made the job much easier!

Coincidentally, Mike “ExcelIsFun” Girvin, recently posted a video tutorial that shows how to use this handy feature. Mike is the author of Ctrl+Shift+Enter: Mastering Excel Array Formulas, and posts lots of Excel videos on YouTube. And he likes to say Boom!

Contextures Posts

Here’s what I posted last week:

  • You can drag pictures from Windows Explorer into Word, but not into Excel. So, if you want to drag and drop images, drag them into Word first, and from there into Excel.
  • When working with pivot tables, you can click the Refresh All button, to update everything at once. If some updates are taking too long, you can stop one or more of them.
  • Finally, for a humorous peek at what other people are saying about Excel, read this week’s collection of Excel tweets, on my Excel Theatre blog.

Other Excel Articles

Here are a few of the Excel articles that I read last week, that you might find useful:

  • Mynda Treacy used Excel to design a Minecraft themed cake for her son’s birthday party. Read the comments too, to see what unusual things other people have done with Excel.
  • Chandoo would like to know which Excel book you’ll read next. See his pick, and check the comments for lots more suggestions.
  • Felienne Hermans, an assistant professor at Delft University of Technology based in the Netherlands, explains why spreadsheets stink, and 4 ways to improve them.
  • The Office Watch blog warns that even if you’re only showing a few items in the Most Recently Used (MRU) list in Excel 2013, more are being stored in the registry.

Excel Resources

Here are some upcoming events, courses and new books, related to Excel.

  • Registration is open for the Amsterdam Excel Summit. The one-day event runs on May 14, 2014, and features sessions by several Excel MVPs, such as Bill Jelen (Mr. Excel), Ken Puls and Charles Williams. All the sessions are in English, and the limit is 100 participants, so sign up now, if you’re interested.
  • The Cleveland Modern Excel User Group meets the second Monday of every month, from 5:30 – 7:30 PM, so that would be tonight! Registration is free and you can get the details here. At the March meeting, Jeff Mlakar from the BI Team at Bennett Adelson is going to speak on Power BI.

What Did You Read?

If you read any other interesting Excel articles recently, that you’d like to share, please add a comment below, or send me an email.

Please include a brief description, and a link to the article.

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Stay on top of things with Excel's Watch Window blog.contextures.com/

Excel Roundup 20140303

Have you used Power Pivot yet? If you’d like a quick intro, and a few tips, watch this 15 minute video from Microsoft. Owen Duncan, Senior Content Developer for Power Pivot, takes you through some basics in this video, and talks about best practices.

If you’d like to learn more, their blog article has links to other Power Pivot articles on the Microsoft site.

VIDEO NO LONGER AVAILABLE

Contextures Posts

Here’s what I posted last week:

  • Instead of using the default icon sets in Excel, you can create colored Harvey Balls, or other icons, with conditional formatting and custom number formats.
  • Did you know that you can accidentally create calculated items in a pivot table? Learn how it happens, and how to remove them.
  • Finally, for a humorous peek at what other people are saying about Excel, read this week’s collection of Excel tweets, on my Excel Theatre blog.

Other Excel Articles

Here are a few of the Excel articles that I read last week, that you might find useful:

  • If you like trains, as much as you like Excel, the National Railway Museum (UK) is looking for volunteers to enter historical data into spreadsheets.
  • Scott Lyerly lists his favourite books and websites for getting started with Excel programming. What would you add to the list? And if Dick Kusleika is “Sam Malone”, who are the other characters at the Daily Dose of Excel?
  • Have you ever built a convoluted workbook, with formulas that make even your head hurt? John Rougeux shares his 3 Excel pro tips for helping others not hate you.
  • Jeff Weir explains Robert Mensa’s technique for creating robust dynamic drop downs, without VBA. Just remember, the best we can do is build things that are idiot resistant, not idiot proof.

Excel Resources

Here are some upcoming events, courses and new books, related to Excel.

  • Registration is open for the Amsterdam Excel Summit. The one-day event runs on May 14, 2014, and features sessions by several Excel MVPs, such as Bill Jelen (Mr. Excel), Ken Puls and Charles Williams. All the sessions are in English, and the limit is 100 participants, so sign up now, if you’re interested.

Excel 2013 for Scientists by Dr. Gerard Verschuuren

This 250 page book is published by Holy Macro! Books, and here’s the intro from Amazon:
”With examples from the world of science, this reference teaches scientists how to create graphs, analyze statistics and regressions, and plot and organize scientific data. Scientists can learn the tips and techniques of Excel—and tailor them specifically to their experiments, designs, and research. They will learn when to use NORMDIST vs NORMSDist and CONFIDENCE vs Z, how to keep data-validation lists on a hidden worksheet, use pivot tables to chart frequency distribution, generate random samples with various characteristics, and much more.”

What Did You Read?

If you read any other interesting Excel articles last week, that you’d like to share, please add a comment below.

Please include a brief description, and a link to the article.

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Excel Roundup 20140224

If your laptop screen is too small, maybe you’re ready for an 82” touch screen, or start a bit smaller (and maybe cheaper) with a 55” version.

You can see Power Map in Excel on this giant screen, at the 7:15 mark, in the video below. My favourite moment is at 9:10, when the presenter says, “This is not the Excel spreadsheet I grew up with, that’s for sure.”

True! Excel was black and white only, with one sheet, when I started using it.

VIDEO NO LONGER AVAILALBE

Contextures Posts

Here’s what I posted last week:

  • Shape Styles are flat in #Excel 2013, but you can change a setting to see rounded options, like the ones in Excel 2010.
  • After deleting items from a pivot table’s source data, they can still appear in the pivot field drop downs. See how to remove them.
  • If an Excel file is linked to another workbook, you can break the links. If the Break Link button is not available, this might be why.
  • Finally, for a humorous peek at what other people are saying about Excel, read this week’s collection of Excel tweets, on my Excel Theatre blog.

Other Excel Articles

Here are a few of the Excel articles that I read last week, that you might find useful:

  • Winston Snyder shares his code for turning the field captions on and off in a pivot table. Tip: If it’s just the headings, “Row Labels” and “Column Labels” that you don’t like, change from Compact Layout to Tabular Layout.
  • I use Feedly for my RSS feeds, to find and read Excel articles. If you’re using it too, remember to download your OPML file, to create a backup of all your feeds. You never know when a reader will suddenly disappear (Yes, I mean you, Google Reader.)

Excel Resources

Here are some upcoming events, courses and new books, related to Excel.

  • Registration is open for the Amsterdam Excel Summit. The one-day event runs on May 14, 2014, and features sessions by several Excel MVPs, such as Bill Jelen (Mr. Excel), Ken Puls and Charles Williams. All the sessions are in English.

Microsoft Excel 2013 Programming by Example with VBA, XML, and ASP by Julitta Korol

The Amazon listing doesn’t have a “Look Inside” feature, and there aren’t any reviews yet, so I’m not sure what topics are covered. The book blurb says, “a practical how-to book on Excel programming, suitable for readers already familiar with the Excel user interface. The book introduces programming concepts via numerous multi-step, illustrated, hands-on exercises. More advanced topics are introduced via custom projects.”

What Did You Read?

If you read any other interesting Excel articles last week, that you’d like to share, please add a comment below.

Please include a brief description, and a link to the article.

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Excel on 82" touch screen? I need this! blog.contextures.com