Commonly Used Excel Functions
Commonly Used Excel Functions
Some Excel functions apply to specific subject areas, but others are general and apply to all
needs. The following list shows an array of Excel functions used by one and all. Check here for a
quickie reference to their purpose.
Function Description
SUM Calculates the sum of a group of values
AVERAGE Calculates the mean of a group of values
COUNT Counts the number of cells in a range that contains numbers
INT Removes the decimal portion of a number, leaving just the integer portion
ROUND Rounds a number to a specified number of decimal places or digit positions
IF Tests for a true or false condition and then returns one value or another
NOW Returns the system date and time
TODAY Returns the system date, without the time
Calculates a sum from a group of values, but just of values that are included because
SUMIF
a condition is met
COUNTIF Counts the number of cells in a range that match a criteria
Function Description
LEFT Extracts one or more characters from the left side of a text string
RIGHT Extracts one or more characters from the right side of a text string
Extracts characters from the middle of a text string; you specify which
MID
character position to start from and how many characters to include
CONCATENATE Assembles two or more text strings into one
REPLACE Replaces part of a text string with other text
LOWER Converts a text string to all lowercase
UPPER Converts a text string to all uppercase
PROPER Converts a text string to proper case
LEN Returns a text string’s length (number of characters)
Order of Operations in Excel
Mathematics dictates a protocol of how formulas are interpreted, and Excel follows that protocl.
The following is the order in which mathematical operators and syntax are applied both in Excel
and in general mathematics. You can remember this order by memorizing the mnemonic phrase,
“Please excuse my dear aunt Sally.”
1. Parentheses
2. Exponents
3. Multiplication and division
4. Addition and subtraction
Preceding the row and/or column designators with a dollar sign ($) specifies an absolute
reference in Excel.
Example Comment
=A1 Complete relative reference
=$A1 The column is absolute; the row is relative
=A$1 The column is relative; the row is absolute
=$A$1 Complete absolute reference
Excel's Error Messages
If you create a formula in Excel that conatins an error or circular reference, Excel lets you know
about it with an error message. A handful of errors can appear in a cell when a formula or
function in Excel cannot be resolved. Knowing their meaning helps correct the problem.
Error Meaning
#DIV/0! Trying to divide by 0
#N/A! A formula or a function inside a formula cannot find the referenced data
#NAME? Text in the formula is not recognized
A space was used in formulas that reference multiple ranges; a comma separates
#NULL!
range references
#NUM! A formula has invalid numeric data for the type of operation
#REF! A reference is invalid
#VALUE! The wrong type of operand or function argument is used