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Skills for Success: Excel. Association of Soil & Water Conservation Districts Summer Conference By: Darci Harrison. Create Workbooks with Excel. Skill 1: Create and Save New Workbooks Skill 2: Enter Worksheet Data and Merge and Center Titles
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Skills for Success: Excel Association of Soil & Water Conservation Districts Summer Conference By: Darci Harrison
Create Workbooks with Excel • Skill 1: Create and Save New Workbooks • Skill 2: Enter Worksheet Data and Merge and Center Titles • Skill 3: Construct Addition and Subtraction Formulas • Skill 4: Construct Multiplication and Division Formulas • Skill 5: Adjust Column Widths and Apply Cell Styles • Skill 6: Use the SUM Function • Skill 7: Copy Formulas and Functions Using the Fill Handle • Skill 8: Format, Edit, and Check the Spelling of Data • Skill 9: Create Footers and Change Page Settings • Skill 10: Display and Print Formulas and Scale Worksheets for Printing • Skill 11: Create New Workbooks from Templates
Create Workbooks with Excel • Key Terms • Workbook • Worksheets • Active Cell • Cell Reference • Formula Bar • Common Ways to Move or Scroll Through a Worksheet • INSERT CHART FROM PAGE 35
Create Workbooks with ExcelSkill 2: Enter Worksheet Data and Merge and Center Titles • Selecting a range • Home tab > Alignment Group > Merge & Center button
Create Workbooks with ExcelSkill 3: Construct Addition and Subtraction Formulas Skill 4: Construct Multiplication and Division Formulas • Creating a Basic Formula • All Formulas MUST begin with an = (equal sign) • Example =B4+C4
Create Workbooks with ExcelSkill 5: Adjust Column Widths and Apply Cell Styles • Row/Column Heading • Applying Cell Styles • Select Your Cell for Formatting > Home Tab > Styles Group > Cell Styles
Create Workbooks with ExcelSkill 6: Use the SUM Function • Select the cell you would like your total to appear in. • Home Tab > Editing Group > SUM button
Create Workbooks with ExcelSkill 7: Copy Formulas and Functions Using the Fill Handle • Fill Handle- the small black square in the lower right corner of the selection
Create Workbooks with ExcelSkill 8: Format, Edit, and Check the Spelling of DataSkill 9: Create Footers • Formatting Numerical Data • Home Tab > Styles Group > Click Cell Styles > Number Format • Spell Check • Press Ctrl + Home to make cell A1 active • Review Tab > Proofing Group > Spelling Button • Create Footer • Insert Tab > Text Group > Header & Footer
Create Workbooks with ExcelSkill 10: Display and Print Formulas and Scale Worksheets for PrintingSkill 11: Create New Workbooks from Templates • Display and Print Underlying Formulas • Formulas Tab > Formula Auditing group > Show Formulas button • Scale Worksheet for Printing • Page Layout Tab > Dialog Box Launcher > In Page Setup Dialog box > Print Preview
Create Charts • Skill 1: Construct and Copy Formulas Containing Absolute Cell References • Skill 2: Format Numbers • Skill 3: Create Column Charts • Skill 4: Format Column Charts • Skill 5: Create Pie Charts and Chart Sheets • Skill 6: Explode and Color Pie Slices, and Insert Text Boxes
Create ChartsSkill 1: Construct and Copy Formulas Containing Absolute Cell ReferencesSkill 2: Format Numbers • Absolute cell reference- a cell reference that remains the same when it is copied or filled to other cells. To make a cell reference absolute, insert a dollar sign before the row and column reference. • Format Numbers • General format- a number format that does not display commas or trailing zeros to the right of a decimal point. • Accounting number format- applies comma separators where appropriate, inserts a fixed dollar sign aligned at the left edge of the cell, applies two decimal places and leaves a small amount of space at both the right and left to accommodate parentheses for negative numbers. • Comma cell style- adds commas where appropriate and applies the same formatting as Accounting number format but without a dollar sign. • Home tab > Number group
Create ChartsSkill 3: Create Column ChartsSkill 4: Format Column Charts • Column chart- useful for illustrating comparisons among related numbers • Select the range > Insert tab > Charts group > Column • Modify Chart by applying different chart layouts or styles.
Create ChartsSkill 5: Create Pie Charts and Chart SheetsSkill 6: Explode and Color Pie Slices, and Insert Text Boxes • Pie chart- displays the relationship of parts to a whole. • Select the range > Insert tab > Charts group > Pie • Chart sheet- a workbook sheet that contains only a chart and is useful when you want to view a chart separately from the data. • Design tab > Location Group > Move Chart > New Sheet • Explode and Color Pie Slices, and Insert Text Boxes • Layout tab > Insert group > text box
Manage Multiple Worksheets • Skill 1: Work with Grouped Worksheets • Skill 2: Use Multiple Math Operators in a Formula • Skill 3: Construct Formulas that Refer to Cells in Other Worksheets
Manage Multiple WorksheetsSkill 1: Work with Grouped Worksheets • You can group any number of worksheets in a workbook. After the worksheets are grouped, you can edit data or format cells in all the grouped worksheets at the same time. • Right-click one of the sheet tabs > click Select All Sheets
Manage Multiple WorksheetsSkill 2: Use Multiple Math Operators in a Formula • Excel follows a set of mathematical rules for performing calculations within a formula, called operator precedence. • Expressions within the parentheses are calculated first. • Multiplication and division are performed before addition and subtraction. • IF a formula contains operators within the same level, Excel evaluates from left to right.
Use Excel Functions • Skill 1: Use the SUM and Average Functions • Skill 2: Use the MIN and MAX Functions • Skill 3: Use the IF Function
Use Excel FunctionsSkill 1: Use the SUM and Average FunctionsSkill 2: Use the MIN and MAX Functions • Function- a prewritten formula that takes input, performs an operation, and returns a value. • Statistical functions- predefined formulas that describe a collection of data – for example, totals, counts, and averages. • AVERAGE function- adds a group of values and then divides the results by the number of values in the group. • MIN function- returns the smallest in a range of cells • MAX function- returns the largest in a range of cells
Thank you! Association of Soil & Water Conservation Districts Summer Conference Darci Harrison darciharrison@Nokomis.k12.il.us