2.1 What Is A Spreadsheet?: Content of Some Other Box
2.1 What Is A Spreadsheet?: Content of Some Other Box
You will see that you can do amazing things with them with very little effort.
We’ll do some as illustrations. You should try doing them by yourself. When you
are done, you will know enough about spreadsheets to use them productively to
solve problems and check work. You can do anything doable on a graphing
calculator, but you can see all the results and intermediate steps and correct
anything any time.
You enter things into the boxes. You can left click your mouse onto any box, and
then type in your entry. (There are analogous ways to do this on a mobile device.)
By the way, each box has a name given by its column letter (columns run from A
to Z then AA to AZ then BA to BZ etc.; and a row number. Rows run from 1 to
thousands.)
For example, typing =sin(A2) in B2 will put the sine of the number in A2 (given in
radians) into box B2.
You must start by typing in an equal sign, then any function you know the name
of, or can pick from the list of functions given by the spreadsheet. On my
spreadsheet you can click on ‘formulas’ at the top of the page and see and choose
the one you want. There are so many listed that you may get dizzy if you try to
look at the list, but you will recover.
Of course you can also use parentheses and many functions to make your own
complicated formulas using many different functions. For example
=sqrt(sin(A2)*exp(A3)/(1+atan(A5)) will give the square root of the product of the
sine of what is in A2 and (e to the power that is in A3) all divided by (1 plus the
angle whose tangent is in A5, described in radians between -\pi−π and \pi)π).
The best features come from what happens when you copy what is in one box (or a
rectangle of boxes) elsewhere.
When what you have in box B2 refers to some other box, say A2, when you
copy B2 somewhere else, the reference box moves with it. Thus if in B2 you
have put =sin(A2), and you copy B2 into say, D2.
Then D2 will contain =sin(C2). Copying B2 into R7 will put =sin(Q7) there. If I
remember my alphabet correctly, B comes right after A, D right after C, and R
right after Q.
You click on the box you want to copy, press Ctrl and c at the same time, and
the entry will enter "the clipboard". You may then move the cursor to where
you want to copy, and press Ctrl and v at the same time. Try it and see. (by the
way, if you have done something you didn’t want to do, then pressing Ctrl and z
at the same time undoes it.)
All you have to do is put a dollar sign (a $) in front of the index (letter or
number or both) that you do not want to change. Thus, =sin($A2) will not
change the column index which will stay A. Similarly =sin(A$2) anywhere will
keep the reference in the second row, and putting dollar signs in front of both will
keep the reference box A2 no matter where you copy it.
Even better, you can copy a whole rectangle, or copy a single box everywhere in a
rectangle.
How?
Suppose you want to copy the contents of box B2 into the rectangle with corners
C5 and E100.
First you click on box B2 and press Ctrl and c at the same time.
The next step is selecting the target block of boxes. To do this you move the
cursor to C5 do a left click, and hold down the shift key while you move the
cursor to E100. Then do a left click. The blocks in the rectangle should then
show that they have been "selected". Finally you press Ctrl and v. This should do
it.
Yes. You can copy material down or to the right (and using the menu you can
copy to the left or up as well.)
To do this ‘select’ the material (all in one row) that you want to copy down
along with the places below it that you want to copy them into. (Select as
described above.) Next press Ctrl and d simultaneously. (you can hold down
the Ctrl key and while it is down press on the d key.)
To copy to the right you select appropriately in one column and press Ctrl
and r together similarly.
To go up or to the left there is a icon near the top right on the home menu which
brings down your choice of whatever direction you want to copy.
Spreadsheets today allow you to do so many things that they are scary. There are
on old Excel (2007) 7 columns of menu pages, each of which allows choice among
roughly 20 menus, which you can drop down allowing many many options, but
you can ignore them all, if you know how to enter functions and copy. Well, if you
want to save what you have done in a file, you can press Ctrl and s together. You
will then have to state what file you want to save to.