Spreadsheet Roundup 20150205
Here is a roundup of selected spreadsheet articles from last month. Alice Keeler shows how to import multiple Google forms to one spreadsheet Give your Excel Pivot Table a makeover so the data is...
Here is a roundup of selected spreadsheet articles from last month. Alice Keeler shows how to import multiple Google forms to one spreadsheet Give your Excel Pivot Table a makeover so the data is...
Here is a roundup of selected spreadsheet articles from last month. At Macworld, Lou Hattersley compares the iPad versions of Microsoft Excel and Apple Numbers. Her recommendation might surprise you. Mu Lin suggests 3...
Yesterday was Spreadsheet Day, and we celebrated the 35th anniversary of the VisiCalc release and shipping date. The celebration is getting more popular every year, and below are some of the articles that I...
Happy Spreadsheet Day 2014! This is the 35th anniversary of the VisiCalc launch date in 1979, so I hope that you have some special celebrations planned. If you’re not sure how Spreadsheet Day began,...
Here are a few of the spreadsheet articles that I found recently, that you might find useful: You can send email from a Google spreadsheet, by adding a simple script to the file. A...
This looks interesting – the Analytics section of INFORMS is holding its 3rd annual Spreadsheet Guru contest. In case you’ve never heard of them, The Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS)...
Happy Spreadsheet Day 2013! In honour of this special occasion, here is a collection of my favourite spreadsheet tweets from this year. I collect and post Excel tweets every Friday on my Excel Theatre...
On her blog, A Typical English Home, Angela Shear shows us how to make labels in Excel. These aren’t the typical, boring address labels that you’d make at the office. No, these are fun...
Happy Spreadsheet Day 2012! What are you doing to celebrate? To mark this special occasion, I’ve posted links to 5 of my favourite Excel tips from the past year, on my Contextures Blog. The...
Sure, you use Excel for all kinds of fancy calculations. Your workbooks are full of mega-formulas and user-defined functions. Your macros magically summarize the data, and you create monthly reports with the click of...
Search:
As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases