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Basic Excel Learning

This document provides an introduction and lesson plan for learning the basics of Microsoft Excel 2013. The objectives are to become familiar with the Excel interface, learn how to create, edit and format worksheets and tables, use formulas, create graphs and charts, and use pivot tables. The lesson plan walks through navigating the ribbon menu, backstage view, and how to create, delete, and modify worksheets. It provides detailed explanations of the various tabs and functions within the Excel interface.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
100% found this document useful (1 vote)
182 views

Basic Excel Learning

This document provides an introduction and lesson plan for learning the basics of Microsoft Excel 2013. The objectives are to become familiar with the Excel interface, learn how to create, edit and format worksheets and tables, use formulas, create graphs and charts, and use pivot tables. The lesson plan walks through navigating the ribbon menu, backstage view, and how to create, delete, and modify worksheets. It provides detailed explanations of the various tabs and functions within the Excel interface.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Microsoft Excel 2013 Essentials


Introduction
Microsoft Excel is one of the most widely used programs for organizing information
and data using spreadsheets. This is due not only to the ease of learning and use of the
program, but also to the wide range of customization options that it offers. For this
reason, we aim to become proficient at understanding the basics of this program
because many users in the labs are using Excel for their schoolwork. With a strong
knowledge of the most commonly used elements, we can efficiently help users with a
majority of their questions.

Objectives
1) Become familiar with the basic interface of Excel 2013
2) Learn to create, edit and delete worksheets
3) Format/modify tables (basic and advanced)
4) Use formulas
5) Understanding Referencing
6) Create graphs and charts
7) Use pivot tables and pivot charts

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Navigating the Interface


In this section, we will become familiar with the ribbon menu and the Backstage View in Excel
2013. These menus are what you will use to navigate your way to the different tools that we are
going to use.

First, open Excel 2013 from the start menu.


The Recent window will be the first thing to open. You can open up a new spreadsheet
or another spreadsheet you had previously been working on. Your screen will look like
this:

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For the purposes of this lesson plan, go ahead and click on the ”lank workbook icon. Then your
screen should look like this.

Now we will introduce the features and functions of the ribbon. The ribbon is the long,
horizontal strip of menus and buttons at the top of the screen. This is where all of your tools are
located that allow you to edit your spreadsheet.

Click on the HOME tab. This tab contains all of your basic formatting
functions that allow you to edit cells and the appearance of the information they
contain.
Click on the INSERT tab. This tab allows you to place objects and images into
your spreadsheet to supplement your data
Click on the PAGE LAYOUT tab. This tab contains all of the tools that allow
you to edit the actual page characteristics of the spreadsheet and decide how it
will look when it is exported to another format or printed. Here is where you
can also decide which information to include for printing.
Click on the FORMULAS tab. This tab allows you to create, edit and
automate formulas in your spreadsheet.
Click on the DATA tab. This tab allows you to import data from other sources
as well as manage the data in your spreadsheet.

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Click on the REVIEW tab. This tab allows you to check your document for
errors, and it also contains tools for editing, collaborating and protecting your
information.
Click on the VIEW tab. This tab allows you to change the views not only of
the spreadsheet you are currently working on, but also the actual orientation
of the program window in case you are working with multiple files.

Now that we have gone over the basic elements of the ribbon, we are going to talk about the File
tab and Backstage View. In the file tab you will find some of the options that were available
under the Office Button menu in Excel 2010 as well as some new options.

Click on the FILE tab at the top left corner of the screen.
The program will switch to Backstage View, which looks like this:

You will notice that there are many different options available to choose from, they
might look familiar if you have ever used an earlier version of Excel or another Office
program.

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• Info - allows you to protect your workbook, inspect your workbook
for issues, manage the version of your workbook, edit browser view
options if sharing on the web, and look at your workbook s properties.
• New - allows you to create a new workbook, either a blank
workbook, a template provided on the computer s software, or an
online template.
• Open - will allow you to search for a file that was either recently
opened or used, on the UF Team Site, on your SkyDrive, or on the
Computer s drive.
• Save - will allow you to save the latest changes made to your
workbook in the same location and under the same file name that it
was last saved. If this is the first time saving this file, Excel will prompt
you to choose a name and a location for your file.
• Save “s - allows you not only to be specific about the file name and
location, but also presents several other options for saving in different
formats.
• Print - will show you a list of printing options as well as a print
preview in the same area. This view should be very similar to you if
you used Office 2010.
• Share - will give you two options to share your workbook. You can
share your document either through SkyDrive or through e-mail as an
attachment (PDF or XPS), a link to a shared location, or through
Internet fax.
• Export - allows you to either create a PDF or XPS document, or
change the file type of the workbook. You can change the workbook s
file type to an Excel 97-2003 workbook, an OpenDocument Spreadsheet
(for Open Office), an Excel template, a Macro-Enabled workbook, a
Binary workbook, a text file (tab delimited, .txt), a CSV file(comma-
delimited, .csv), or a formatted text file (space-delimited, .prn).
• To access even more file types, double-click on Save as “nother File
Type
• Close - will close your document without closing the program. If
you have made changes, it will prompt you to save those changes.
• Account - will show your user information and product information.
Underneath user information there is the option to change your
Office Background & theme.

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• Options - will bring up an entirely new dialog box that looks like
this:

Click on the Options tab.


This will bring up a new dialog box with the following options:

• General – allows you to change the user interface, the default font
style, view, and sheet number, as well as customize the username of
Microsoft Office, change the background and theme, and alter start-up
options.
• Formulas – allows you to change calculation options, formula
completing/entry options, error notification settings, and error
checking rules
• Proofing – will allow you to change autocorrect options and extra
spelling correction options
• Save – you can customize how workbooks are saved, when to save
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auto recover information or when to disable it, set a default saving
location, and offline editing options.
• Language – allows you to set editing, display, and help languages
• Advanced – allows you to view and change extra editing options such
as automatically inserting a decimal point
• Customize Ribbon – this allows you to customize what shows up
when you click on one of tabs, such as INSERT , on the Ribbon
• Quick Access Toolbar – allows you to customize what appears on the
Quick Access Toolbar (near the Save, Undo, and Redo buttons)
• Add-Ins – allows you to view all the Microsoft Office Add-ins, and
manage them.
• Trust Center – this is where all privacy statements are stored.

Now that we have reviewed the basic interface of Excel 2013, we are going to transition into
using the tools on the ribbon and in the office button menu that we are now familiar with to edit
our new spreadsheet.

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Creating, Deleting, and Modifying Worksheets


Files in Excel are organized into pages called worksheets. A file or book can have just
one worksheet or it can have multiple, and in this section we are going to learn how to
create, rename and delete worksheets. The reason that we might want multiple worksheets
in one file is that a user could have many different types of data or several different data
sets for one given topic, and he or she could want to keep them all in one place but still
separate them into different pages for easy organization. Having the option to create
multiple worksheets is a great tool for efficient data organization.

There are a few different ways that you can add, delete, move and rename your worksheets. One
way is by right-clicking on the worksheet tabs themselves and selecting an option, and the other
way is to use the menus in the cells section under the home tab.

To create a new sheet, click on the button that looks like a plus-sign at the
bottom of the screen next to your existing worksheets.

To rename an existing sheet, right click on the sheet you want to rename and
select Rename. Now the name of your sheet will turn into an editable field
into which you can type a custom name. You can also double-click on the text
Sheet to edit the title of the worksheet.
To delete a sheet, right click on the sheet you want to delete and select delete.

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You can also perform these actions in the home tab under the section labeled cells.
Here you have 3 options: insert, delete, and format.

Click the Insert button and select Insert Sheet


Click the Delete button and select Delete Sheet
Click the Format button and select Rename Sheet
Steps 4-6 are a different way of performing the same actions as steps 1-3, which one
you choose to use is personal preference.

If you change your mind about the order of your worksheets and decide that you want to place
them in a different order, it is easy to change this by simply clicking and dragging the
worksheet tabs to the desired position. To do this, click and hold the tab that you would like to
move. As you move it horizontally, a small black arrow will appear. The sheet will drop into
the spot where the arrow is pointing, so as soon as you see the arrow pointing to where you
want the sheet then you can let go of the mouse and it will move into that place.

Now that we have gone over how to create, delete, rename and move sheets, we can transition
into actually entering data into the fields and learning how to manipulate that data. In the
next section, we will learn to use the basic formatting tools as well as a few of the advanced
formatting features.

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Formatting Worksheet Data


Now that we are familiar with the interface and how to manipulate multiple sheets,
we will move on to formatting data in our spreadsheet. For this exercise, we are going
to open up an existing workbook with an unorganized set of data and apply different
formatting features to it. The purpose of learning how to do this is to become
proficient at helping users be able to organize their data, make it presentable and
quickly rearrange it without having to enter it multiple times. Formatting tools save
a tremendous amount of time and help us create professional looking results.

Open the exercise file from your desktop.


There will be two worksheets titled exercise and exercise . We will begin by
working on exercise . You will be notified when to click on the exercise
worksheet. As you can see, we have a very long list of information that is not easy to
read. The columns are too small to display all of the text and it is unclear how the
information is organized. In the following steps, we will learn how to organize this
information by applying our own criteria as well as make the information more
aesthetically appealing. Our first step will be to adjust the width of the columns to
match the contents.

Select the column to format by clicking the corresponding letter (ex. to select
column A, click the letter A at the top of the sheet to highlight the entire
column of values)
In the Home tab, click on Format from the Cells section. Select
Autofit Column Width and this will adjust the width of the column to the
width of the cell containing the longest amount of text.

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Repeat this step for all 4 columns until they are all adjusted.
If you have a large amount of columns and would like to do this procedure to all of
them, you can highlight as many columns as you want and double click in the
highlighted area when crosshairs are displayed to adjust them all at once. This can
save time if your data set is very large.

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Now that we have adjusted our columns, it is much easier to read the information in the
spreadsheet. However, what if we would like to view the information in a different order, or
what if we would like to view only parts of the information at a time? In the following steps,
we will learn how to organize our information and view selected sections based on our own
criteria.

Click on cell A1. There should be a bold dark green border around this cell.
Click on format as table in the home tab.
At this point, your screen will look like this:

You will have a range of different styles and color schemes to choose from, ranging
from light to dark. These are samples of how your information will look once the
formatting is applied.

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As soon as you pick a template, a dialogue box will appear:

By default, Excel will guess which information you are trying to format. As you can
see, it has automatically selected all of our information because it is surrounded by
the moving dotted line. If for some reason it guesses incorrectly or if you want to
format a different area of information, you can easily click and drag your pointer
over the data you would like to use instead. You will also see that there is a check box
labeled My table has headers. When this is checked, Excel will take the first row of
information and make it into titles rather than including it into the data set. Our
table does have headers, because as you can see each column is labeled according to
what is contained below it. For this reason we want to keep the My table has
headers box checked.

Make sure the My table has headers box is checked and click OK.
As you can see, Excel has applied the formatting you selected to your data. At this
point it is a good idea to check the entire table and make sure your information was
formatted correctly.

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The next step that we are going to do now that our table is formatted is to filter the
information by category in order to be able to read it easier. This is especially helpful for
very long lists like the one we have, because we can make it easier to read only certain bits
of information. As you can see, after we formatted our data several arrow buttons
appeared in the cells on the top row. We will be using these to filter our data.

Click on the small arrow button in cell A1.


You should see a menu that looks like this:

What we have is a list of all of the subcategories under the category heading. What
this function has done is that it has taken all of the information in this column and
reduced it to 4 subcategories, meaning that any cell in this column will only display
one of these 4 words. What you can do at this point is decide which information you
would like to hide and which you would like to see. This is a very useful tool for
filtering large sets of data like the one we have and making it easy to view it in smaller
sections.

Deselect the select all check box.


Check only the box that says K-Indie and click OK

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As you can see, Excel has filtered our data so that all we see is everything that is in
the computer category. You will notice however that the other cells did not
disappear: they are just hidden. Look at the numbering of the cells and notice that
they now start at 1 but skip to 38; therefore, our data has not been renumbered, just
reorganized.

Try this with some of the other columns and see what happens when you
select and deselect different categories. When you are done, make sure to
choose select all under each of the 5 arrow buttons so that all of the
information appears again.

If you want to remove the arrow buttons from your table, you
can always choose to turn them off. You can do this by clicking
the sort and filter button under editing in the home tab.
Once you do that, simple deselect filter and the arrow buttons
will disappear. If you d like to use them again, simply re-select
filter and they will appear again.

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We have already learned basic formatting so next we are going to move on to a few formatting
options that are a little more advanced. To organize our data even more, we will explore some
conditional formatting that will help us to automate the calculation of our data.

Under the styles section in the home tab, you will see a button labeled Conditional
Formatting. We are going to use this menu to explore some more ways that we can organize
our data.

Click on the Conditional Formatting button.


You will see a menu that looks like this:

There are several options here for ways that we can highlight our data based on certain
criteria. It is important to note that these rules will only apply to cells that have
numerical data in them. For example, in our case we have columns A, B, C, and E
which have no numerical data in them and row D which has only numbers. If we were
to apply conditional formatting to the table, changed would only be made to row D.
For this reason, before we apply any formatting we are going to select just that row.

Select all of the data in row D by dragging your mouse from cell D2 to
D307 or by selecting column D at the top of the worksheet.
Click on the Conditional Formatting button.

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Select Highlight Cells Rules and then select Greater Than.


Your screen should now look like this:

In the first field, type 45.


In the drop down menu, make sure it says Yellow Fill with Dark Yellow
Text
Click OK

Now, you will notice that every value in column D that is greater than 45 has been
formatted to have dark red text with a light red fill color. This is extremely useful if
you have a large amount of numerical data and would like to set rules about which
ones you would like to stand out. This same idea applies to all of the other options in
the Highlight Cells Rules menu. We will not take the time to try every single

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option, but you can see how powerful this function can be for analyzing your data.

The next menu that we are going to look at is directly under Highlight Cells Rules
and is called Top/Bottom Rules.

With column D still selected, click on the Conditional Formatting button.


Select Top/Bottom Rules and then select Top 10 Items.

Your screen should now look like this:

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This formatting option will highlight the top ten numbers in the column that we
have selected, which are going to be the 10 highest numbers in the set. If you would
like it to highlight the top five numbers or any other amount of values, you can easily
change that by highlighting the number 10 in the first field and changing it to
something else. Just like the last exercise that we did, we also need to decide how we
want to format the cells. Since we already chose to use a light red fill with dark red
text, let s choose Red Border instead.

Choose Red Border from the drop down menu


Click OK

Now, you will see that the ten highest values in the column we selected have a red
border around them. Similarly, every other option in the Top/Bottom Rules menu
will follow the same format; however we will not take the time to try every single one.

You also have a few more options in the Conditional Formatting menu which are
data bars, color scales and icon sets. These options will apply different colors,
styles or icons to your selected data based on their values relative to the whole set. We
are going to do a quick exercise to illustrate this idea.

Click on the arrow next to Category in column A


Deselect all of the boxes except for the one that says K-Indie
Highlight column D which shows the number of times a song has been
played.

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Click the Conditional Formatting button, select Data Bars and choose
any one of the bar graph icons in that menu.

You will see that colored bars are applied to your data set based on the numerical
values in each individual cell.

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We can also arrange this column from low to high or high to low to better
demonstrate the trend in number of plays.

Click on the arrow next to Plays in column D and select Sort Largest to
Smallest

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We will not go into a lot more detail explaining the Color Scales and Icon Sets
options, but both other options work in a similar manner. You can also change the
rules about how these tools will format your cells by clicking on More Rules… at
the bottom of each menu. Take a few minutes to experiment with these options as they
apply to your data set.

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Slicers and Sparklines
Two important features introduced in Excel 2010 have carried over into Excel 2013:
Sparklines and Slicers. Slicers are windowed filtering tools that can help us sort our data.
Sparklines are mini charts that can be inserted next to data to easily show the relationship
or trend in the data. We will now be investigating how to use Sparklines and Slicers to
enhance an Excel worksheet and make data easier to read and synthesize.

Click on cell “ and go to Insert and then Slicer in the group Filters .

Click the checkboxes next to Category , Plays and Last Play .

You can check all the boxes if needed.

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Now you should see three slicer windows next to the table.

Slicers are almost like the windowed versions of the filter drop-downs at the top of the
table. You can select more than one category at once and also more than one category
across the filters.

Let s say I wanted to know what songs had been played the least amount of times, the
longest time ago.

Click on the 3/25, 3/31, 4/7, 4/13, and 4/14 dates (or click and drag from 3/25
to / ) in the Last Play slicer.
Then click 1, 3, and 4 in the Plays slicer.
Finally click only on K-Pop in the Category slicer.

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You can see that the slicers have allowed me to nicely filter my data so I can see what songs
have been played the least, the longest time ago.
To remove the filter simply click on the Filter icon with a red x next to it at the top right of
the slicer window.

Slicers are useful when you have many, many lines of data that need to be sorted in a
specific way several times. Slicers are more easily accessible and visible than the filter
drop-downs, but they serve the same purpose.

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Now we will move on to inserting Sparklines into our spreadsheet.


For inserting Sparklines, we will need to use the exercise worksheet.
Sparklines are little charts that can be displayed within a single cell to represent your
selected data set. Sparklines are useful for spotting trends at a glance. We are going to
add some Sparklines to our table of information so we can easily see trends and
patterns in our data. We will be previewing each type of Sparkline.

Click on the exercise tab at the bottom of the worksheet.


This worksheet contains fictitious information about the average number of Starbucks
drinks consumed each week by AT Staff for each semester during each year from 2001-
2012. Numerically you can see the trend but at a glance you would not be able to.

Click on the insert tab.


To the right of the Charts & Reports groups is the Sparklines group. There
are three types of Sparkline charts you can insert.

Select cell F5.

Click on the Line Sparkline.

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This dialogue box will appear:

Notice that the location range coincides with the cell we selected before clicking on the
Line Sparkline. We will need to highlight a data range for our Sparkline. The range
will be from Spring 2001 to Fall 2001.

Click inside the Data Range text field


Highlight cells B5 through E5.

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A Line Sparkline will appear in cell F5.

Insert Line Sparklines for the rest of years, showing plot trends
throughout semesters within each academic year. The easiest way would be
to click and drag the fill handle from the corner of cell F5 down to F14.
To click and drag the fill handle, hover your mouse cursor over the bottom
right corner of cell F5, which contains the first Sparkline. When the cursor
changes to a bold +, click and drag the values down to F14 and release.

Notice that once a Sparkline is added to the worksheet, a new tab appears: Design.
This is where we will go to format our newly added Sparklines.

Click on the Design tab


There are several different formatting options available in this tab.

a. You can Edit Data in the Sparkline group if you feel like the
data selected is inaccurate.
b. The Type group contains icons for the different Sparkline mini-
charts in case you want to change to a different chart type.
c. The Show group allows you to choose whether or not you want to
show the specific points in your Sparkline. Options include the high and
low points, the first and last points, negative points, and all points
(markers).
d. The Style group is where you can choose from a host of premade
Sparkline formats. You can also customize your Sparklines by
manually changing the Sparkline color and marker colors.

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e. The Group group gives you the ability to manipulate the Sparkline
axes and group or ungroup Sparkline graphs from each other if there is
more than one in a series.

Choose a style from the Style group


This lesson plan shows Sparkline Style Colorful #4.

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Using the Marker Color options, reveal the High Point and Markers
and choose a color for each one.
This lesson plan shows High Point in black, and Markers in a blue color.

We ve just previewed one type of Sparkline graph. Let us examine the other two,
Column and Win/Loss.

Click on cell G5
Navigate to the Insert tab.
Click on the Column Sparkline
The same Create Sparklines dialogue box will appear.
Higlight cells B5 through E5 for the data range.
Insert Column Sparklines for the rest of years, showing plot trends
throughout semesters within each academic year. The easiest way would be
to click and drag the fill handle from the corner of cell G5 down to G14.
To click and drag the fill handle, hover your mouse cursor over the bottom right corner
of cell F5, which contains the first Sparkline. When the cursor changes to a bold +
click and drag the values down to F14 and release.

Notice that once a Sparkline is added to the worksheet, a new tab appears: Design.
This is where we will go to format our newly added Sparklines.

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Apply a Style from the Design tab and check the box to show High
Point.
This lesson plan shows Sparkline Style Accent 2 (no dark or light), which
has reddish bars. Your data will look like this now:

Notice how much easier it is to determine highest value. Instead of reading the
numbers from left to right to make a decision, we can just check out our Sparklines
for the High Point. The Line Sparkline shows trends, whereas the Column
Sparkline shows value differences.

Let us try the Win/Loss Sparkline. This type of Sparkline is best for showing wins
and losses, as the name implies. For best results, use positive numbers to signify wins
and negative numbers to signify losses.

Click on cell H5
Navigate to the Insert tab.
Click on the Win/Loss Sparkline
The same Create Sparklines dialogue box will appear.
Higlight cells B5 through E5 for the data range.
Insert Winn/Loss Sparklines for the rest of years, showing beverage wins
and losses (in this case, only wins) throughout semesters within each
academic year. The easiest way would be to click and drag the fill handle
from the corner of cell H5 down to H14.

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To click and drag the fill handle, hover your mouse cursor over the bottom right
corner of cell F5, which contains the first Sparkline. When the cursor changes to a
bold + click and drag the values down to F14 and release.

Notice that once a Sparkline is added to the worksheet, a new tab appears: Design.
This is where we will go to format our newly added Sparklines.

Apply a Style from the Design tab.


This lesson plan shows Sparkline Style Colorful # , which has blue bars on top,
and orange bars on the bottom.
Your data should look like this now.

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Formulas

Concept of Formulas and the Formulas Tab


Formulas are equations that perform calculations on values in your worksheet. Using them
to work out mass quantities of calculations will save them time, and the users time. If one
wishes to apply the same calculation to a few or a large sum of data, then using the
Formulas Tab to choose functions from the library will be helpful.

• Make sure you know that in order for a formula to work, an equal sign must
precede the actual equation; failure to do so results in an uncalculated
formula.
• Briefly review the order of operations and that Excel follows PEMDAS,
which stands for Parenthesis, Exponents, Multiplication, Division, Addition,
and Subtraction, from left to right.
• Formulas are not limited to just numbers. Cells or groups of highlighted cells
can be integrated into formulas as well.

Let s practice using formulas and the formulas tab.


Type this formula into cell B1: 3+1+4, and click off to an empty part of the
worksheet.
Because the formula written down did not contain an =, Excel did not recognize
this as a needed calculation and therefore left it as 3+1+4.

Next, type this formula into cell D1: =3+1+4, and click off to an empty part of
the worksheet. Excel completed the calculation for you.
Since there was a proceeding =, Excel received the signal to go through with
calculating the equation for you.

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To show the use of PEMDAS, type this formula into cell C4: =3+(1+4*(1+5))-9.
Just as any math equation and any good scientific calculator, Excel follows the
PEMDAS sequence when solving equations and carrying out formulas.

Finally, to exemplify formulas using cells, add D1 and C4 into cell A7 by


using AutoSum and highlighting each cell.
Instead of having to try and remember cell coordinates of data, and using the plus
symbol each time, it s easier to use AutoSum, which can do that for you.

That was an example using AutoSum, but Excel has a library of other functions, and
the Formulas Tab.

Type in numbers 1 to 9 in cells A10 through I10.

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Navigate to the Formulas tab.


There are more formulas in the formula tab. Some are for everyday use, and some are
for more specific tasks. For instance, in the Function Library group, there is a
subgroup of formulas that can be used to work with finances, trigonometric and math
purposes, text purposes, lookup and referencing purposes, etc. There is a large array
of various formulas one can use in Excel.

Access the formulas Library by clicking on Insert Function from the


Formulas Tab, or by clicking on the fx icon.

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Using “VERAGE will compute the average of a selection into the cell.
Average cells A10 through I10 in cell A12.
Highlight desired range. Do not forget to close parenthesis.

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Click OK when you re done.


The average will now be displayed in the cell that you have chosen.
Using M“X will figure out the maximum value in a selection. MAX cells
A10 through I10 in cell C12.
Highlight desired range. Do not forget to close parenthesis.

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Referencing

Formulas can also be used in referencing. There are two ways of referencing data in
Excel: Relative and Absolute.

Concepts of Referencing
Relative referencing is best shown through examples, which we will be doing shortly.
Absolute referencing always references back to the same cell. Absolute referencing pins
that cell in the calculations. Absolute referencing is identifiable by the use of dollar signs ($),
which pins either or both components of the cell coordinates (letter, number).

Let s put the concepts of relative and absolute referencing into action to see how they
can be useful in easily creating an effective worksheet with multiple formulas and
interactions.
Open Referencing.xls
In cell D4, insert a formula which multiplies price and quantity.
Hit Enter or click the check mark next to the formula field.

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Drag the contents of D4 down to D9.

Notice that while our original formula is B4*C4, it was adjusted when we dragged
it down to D9.
This is an example of relative referencing. Notice that the same formula applies to cell
D6
through D9 by taking the relative cells and multiplying them. For instance, from
B6*C6 to B9*C9

In cell E9, insert a formula which totals up all the subtotals. This can be done
using AutoSum from the formulas tab and highlighting the desired cells.

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Next, to calculate Subtotals and the Total with tax rate, insert a formula
which multiplies Subtotals and the Total with the tax rate in G5, using the
dollar symbol to pin the tax rate in the formula. (ie. D5*$G$5 instead of
D5*G5). So for each box you should be entering in the Subtotal plus the
Subtotal times the Tax Rate.

Make sure that you are aware of the importance of using the dollar symbol correctly.
The dollar symbol is used to pin a data coordinate in the calculations.

An easy way to switch to absolute referencing (using the dollar symbols) and relative
referencing (sans dollar symbols) is to press the F4 key.

Finally, drag the formula down to E10 using the black crosshair to see the Grand Total
of your Trader Steve s shopping cart.

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Graphs and Charts

Concepts of Graphs and Charts


An interesting characteristic about charts and graphs is that they can display information in a
much more meaningful and visual way. They can take a bland or mundane looking list and
completely turn it into visually eye catching presentation. In addition, they convert plain data in
a table to charts or graphs, and you can format them by using either Format as Table in Styles, or
the Design Tab that appears for charts and graphs.

We will now go over how to format charts and graphs to display our information in a captivating
and informative fashion.

Open Classes & Students.xlsx


This worksheet is a tally of how many students fall asleep on average (rounded to the
nearest integer) during each class. It is shown in plain data, but what if this had to be
presented to the professors of each class? It would need to be more eye-catching.

Click on any cell within the table of data.


Clicking on a cell within the table of data identifies the table as the source of information.
Navigate to the Insert Tab
You will see a group of Icons above the Charts label that look like this:

You can use any of the designs offered in either the Column Chart or Bar Chart options
(The first two from the top left, moving to the right) to organize this data.

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In this example I am using the 3-D Cluster Bar Chart.

Change the title of the graph by clicking on # “sleep so that a box appears
around it. Then double-click and replace that text with Students Asleep in
Class
Next, we will take a look at how to format these charts to our liking. In Excel 2010, we had
Design, Layout, and Format tabs to help us alter our tables to our liking. In Excel 2013,
Design and Format tabs were retained but all but one of the Layout features were moved to
options linked to the table itself.

We will first go over the Design and Format tabs before moving onto the Layout features
linked directly to the table.

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Select the chart, and then navigate to the Design Tab.


The Design tab has several options.
• You can change the Chart type here if you feel the current type is
unfitting.

• You can switch your rows and columns (x and y axis data).

Choose a Style from the Styles Group.


Clicking to open the drop down will show you more styles offered by Excel. You will
notice the number of Styles available is much less in 2013 than it was in 2010.
Hovering over each will let you know which design number it is. The example below
shows Style 3, which has 3-D blue bars and a gray gradient background with dark gray
text.

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Now let s navigate to the Format tab.


• This tab has not changed much from Excel 2010 to Excel 2013.
• You can change the basic table appearance and text appearance within the
table as well as add shadows, insert shapes, and resize the cart.

Now that we have covered the Design and Format tabs we can move on to Layout options offered
next to the table.

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If you click on the chart you will see three icons pop-up on the top right-hand side of the table that
look like this:

Hover over the first icon (which looks like a plus-sign) and a pop-up tells you
that this allows you to add/remove and edit chart elements.
“ll options listed are very similar to the options listed in the former Layout tab.
However, in 2013 all options are much more interactive and accessible. Let s go through
each option.
Click on the plus sign and a menu with checkboxes will appear to the right.
Notice that right now only Axes, Chart Title, and Gridlines are checked.
Let s explore the “xes option.
Click on the arrow that appears when you hover over the Axes option.
If you click on the label Axes and not on the arrows all of your Axes will
disappear off of your chart.
Your screen should now look like this:

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There are two options listed, one is for showing the Primary Vertical Axis and one
for the Primary Horizontal. However, if you wanted to edit the size, color, bounds,
or labels of the “xis you would have to either click on More Options at the
bottom of the list OR double-click on either of the axes on the chart.
Either click on More Options at the bottom of the list or double-click on
either of the axes on the chart.
Either of these methods will bring up a side-bar that looks like this:
This side-bar is incredibly important to formatting our chart. You can format in
depth any section of the chart by clicking the drop down next to “xis Options
right underneath Format “xis and clicking on any of the areas listed.

Notice that there are four icons near the top of


the side-bar. This allows you to change not
only the options listed but also size of the axis,
color, and other effects. Remember that the
vertical axis has different options than the
horizontal axis.
 Let s change some things about the
horizontal axis of our chart.
 You can do this either by double-
clicking on the horizontal axis or
click on More Options in the
Axes menu and making sure the
horizontal axis is the axis that is
selected.
 Click on the “xis Options icon
(the one that looks like a column
chart).
o Notice that our options change
depending on which axis is
selected.
 Navigate to Tick Marks and click
on it to bring down options
regarding Tick Marks.
 Click the drop-down next to
Major Type and select Outside
 Select Outside for Minor Type
as well.
o This allows our data to be more
easily compared and read

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The next icon that appears when we click on our chart looks like a paintbrush.

Here you can edit the style or color of your chart without going back into the
Design tab. There are separate submenus for Style and Color.

You might notice that your list of color options is more limited than it was in Excel
2010.

However, you can easily change the color of your data bars by double-clicking on
all the data bars at once
Double-click on all of the data bars at once.
When you do this a side-bar will appear just like when we edited our Axes. If
you click on the Fill & Line Icon this menu will appear.

Make sure that you click on Fill to change


the fill color of the data bars.

You may change your data bars to any color,


or change each data bar to a different color.

I went ahead and changed some bars to


different colors and other bars to other colors.
This makes the chart easier to read as classes
are now more differentiable.

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Now that our table is more visually appealing and easier to read, let s go a step
further and create a pie chart to better visualize the percentage of students falling
asleep in each class.

To do this we need to know how many students are in each class.

Insert these values into Column D next to the number of students asleep.

263
64
97
291
230
293
169
282
270
145
255

Now let s do some math to figure out the percentage of people asleep in each class.

Go to cell E5 and enter in this formula: =C /D .


Use the fill handle to use this formula for each class.
To form percentages you must divide the portion of people asleep by the entire
class size and multiply by 100. Excel 2013 has eliminated the last step in our
formula making and we can turn all of our decimals into percentages by
clicking one button.
If you go to the Number option under the Home tab you will notice an icon
that looks like a percent sign. With all your new decimal data selected, click the
percent button.

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Now you should have a column of percentages.

Select your percentages and while holding down the Ctrl key select the class
names.

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Then go to Insert at the top and click on the Pie Chart icon, selecting the 3-D
chart.

• Choose Style 8 from the Design menu.

Click on the Chart and then on the plus sign icon next to the chart.
• Check the Legend option
• Click on the arrow next to Data Labels to and then More Options

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Make sure you click on the Label Options icon (looks like a column chart)
• Make sure that the Label Options section is expanded
• Deselect Category Name and then select Value

Double-click on the Chart Title and re-name the Chart Percentage of


Students Asleep

You should now see that even though Media Ethics had the largest number of students
asleep in class, it is Operating Systems that has the largest proportion of students
asleep.

To explode that portion of the pie, click to select only that piece and drag it
away from the whole pie.

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Pivot Tables and Charts

Concepts of Pivot Tables and Pivot Charts


Pivot Tables and Pivot Charts are other time saving features of Excel. They are useful when
trying to organize an expansive list of data arranged in a columnar fashion, or vertically atop
one another. Pivot comes from the way users of Excel are given the power to switch data to
and from the X and Y axes. In other words, they can pivot information.

Let s explore Pivot Tables.

Open Pivoting.xlsx
Click a cell within the table to identify the data collection
Click on the Insert Tab and click on PivotTable in the Tables grouping.

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The following box will appear. Click OK.

You have the option of choosing whether or not you want the PivotTable to show in the
same worksheet you have open, or open in a new worksheet on its own. For this lesson, I
will choose New Worksheet.

Excel should lead you to the new worksheet automatically. Rename the new
worksheet Pivot Table.

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To the right side, there is a side-bar titled PivotTable Fields . Check the fields
desired and migrate them into the areas shown at the bottom: Filters,
Columns, Rows, and Values.
This is in fact, where the idea of Pivot Tables and Charts comes from. You get to choose
the fields you want to add, and you get choose which areas to place them in. Fiddle
around with the PivotTable Field List.

Now, the PivotTable is completed. See how easy it was to control your data. We
will go over constructing PivotCharts now.

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We can create a PivotChart using the first worksheet, so let s navigate to the first worksheet.

Make sure you are on the first worksheet titled Tables Charts Graphs.xlsx
Then, click on a cell within the table to identify the data collection.
Click on the Insert Tab and click on PivotChart in the Charts grouping and
select PivotChart.

A dialog box similar to the one that appeared when we created PivotTables
will appear. Click OK.
You have the option of choosing whether or not you want the PivotChart to show in the
same worksheet you have open, or open in a new worksheet on its own. For this lesson, I
will choose New Worksheet.

Excel should lead you to the new worksheet automatically. Rename the new
worksheet Pivot Chart.
If you click in the area where there is a Pivot Chart placeholder the side-bar
will display Pivot Chart Fields . If you click on the Pivot Table placeholder
on the spreadsheet the side-bar will display Pivot Table Fields .

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This should look familiar. It is the same box on the right side, with the same fields and
areas. Again, they can choose which fields they want viewable, and the area they go in.

Notice something different about choosing PivotChart instead of PivotTable?


Choosing PivotChart makes both the table and the chart for you at the same time.
Notice how the table and charts shift as you move from fields from area to area.

Let us explore with filtering. We can narrow down to specific information with filters.
Any fields from the field list that is located in the Filter box will show up above the
Pivot Chart as a filter menu. To filter, we can click to open the drop down menu to
narrow our data.

Let us set the filter so that our table only shows data from a specific Refunder.

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Click to open the drop down menu, and click on “dam from the list and
click OK.

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Now, the table and chart should only display semester counts for Adam only. Also,
notice that filter above the table shows us that the Refunder we are filtering for is
Adam.

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Let us now display semester counts for more than one person: Adam and Andrew.

Click to open the drop down menu and check the box for Select Multiple
Items.
Check boxes will appear next to the names in the list now.

Check the boxes for both Adam and Andrew and click OK

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The table should now display data on Adam and Andrew. However, notice that the filter
above the table no longer shows us the name of whom we re filtering for.

Since we selected more than one item in the list, it shows us (Multiple Items). In case
we needed a reminder of the filters we set, seeing (Multiple Items) would not be
helpful. To see what we checked off, we need to click on the Filter icon to open the drop
down list.

In this case, Slicers would be a useful tool to see which Refunders were being looked at
while still filtering the Pivot Chart and Pivot Table.

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Conclusion
In this lesson, we have gone over many important topics in Microsoft Excel 2013 that
will aid you in helping users in the labs. We have learned how to navigate the program,
manipulate sheets, as well as create and modify tables, graphs and charts. In addition to
that we have learned how to use formulas, explored the concepts of relative and
absolute referencing, and lastly we learned to take our data and use it to create Pivot
Tables and Pivot Charts. Now having the basic understanding of this program and
being able to perform some of the most common functions will greatly improve your
ability to provide good customer service to users in the labs.

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Excel Activity
Sample Product Reports
• Format table
o Make sure there is adequate spacing
o Apply filters to headers
• Apply two different types of conditional formatting
• Subtotal Sales column
• Apply filter for Beverages for Quarter 1 only
o Create Pie Chart that effectively shows the type of beverage and total
sales

Sample Customer Reports


• Format table
o Make sure there is adequate spacing
o Insert Column Sparklines (Hint: Use relative referencing)
• Subtotal each sales column
o Use relative referencing
o Create a Grand Total
• Create a Pivot Table and Pivot Chart
o Include Slicers
o Make sure it is understandable

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