excel tasks
excel tasks
Excel documents are called workbooks. Each workbook has sheets, typically called spreadsheets.
You can add as many sheets as you want to a workbook, or you can create new workbooks to
keep your data separate.
For example, cell A1 on a new sheet. Cells are referenced by their location in the row and
column on the sheet, so cell A1 is in the first row of column A.
1. Select the cell or range of cells that you want to add a border to.
2. On the Home tab, in the Font group, click the arrow next to Borders, and then click the
border style that you want.
1. Select the cell or range of cells that you want to apply cell shading to.
2. On the Home tab, in the Font group, choose the arrow next to Fill Color , and then
under Theme Colors or Standard Colors, select the color that you want.
For more information about how to apply formatting to a worksheet, see Format a worksheet.
When you’ve entered numbers in your sheet, you might want to add them up. A fast way to do
that is by using AutoSum.
1. Select the cell to the right or below the numbers you want to add.
2. Click the Home tab, and then click AutoSum in the Editing group.
AutoSum adds up the numbers and shows the result in the cell you selected.
Adding numbers is just one of the things you can do, but Excel can do other math as well. Try
some simple formulas to add, subtract, multiply, or divide your numbers.
2. Type a combination of numbers and calculation operators, like the plus sign (+) for
addition, the minus sign (-) for subtraction, the asterisk (*) for multiplication, or the
forward slash (/) for division.
3. Press Enter.
You can also press Ctrl+Enter if you want the cursor to stay on the active cell.
To distinguish between different types of numbers, add a format, like currency, percentages, or
dates.
If you don’t see the number format you’re looking for, click More Number Formats.
For more information, see Available number formats.
A simple way to access Excel’s power is to put your data in a table. That lets you quickly filter
or sort your data.
1. Select your data by clicking the first cell and dragging to the last cell in your data.
To use the keyboard, hold down Shift while you press the arrow keys to select your data.
2. Click the Quick Analysis button in the bottom-right corner of the selection.
3. Click Tables, move your cursor to the Table button to preview your data, and then click
the Table button.
The Quick Analysis tool (available in Excel 2016 and Excel 2013 only) let you total your
numbers quickly. Whether it’s a sum, average, or count you want, Excel shows the calculation
results right below or next to your numbers.
1. Select the cells that contain numbers you want to add or count.
2. Click the Quick Analysis button in the bottom-right corner of the selection.
3. Click Totals, move your cursor across the buttons to see the calculation results for your
data, and then click the button to apply the totals.
Conditional formatting or sparklines can highlight your most important data or show data trends.
Use the Quick Analysis tool (available in Excel 2016 and Excel 2013 only) for a Live Preview to
try it out.
For example, pick a color scale in the Formatting gallery to differentiate high, medium,
and low temperatures.
4. When you like what you see, click that option.
The Quick Analysis tool (available in Excel 2016 and Excel 2013 only) recommends the right
chart for your data and gives you a visual presentation in just a few clicks.
1. Select the cells that contain the data you want to show in a chart.
2. Click the Quick Analysis button in the bottom-right corner of the selection.
3. Click the Charts tab, move across the recommended charts to see which one looks best
for your data, and then click the one that you want.
Note: Excel shows different charts in this gallery, depending on what’s recommended for
your data.
1. Select a range of data, such as A1:L5 (multiple rows and columns) or C1:C80 (a single
column). The range can include titles that you created to identify columns or rows.
2. Select a single cell in the column on which you want to sort.
3. Click to perform an ascending sort (A to Z or smallest number to largest).
4. Click to perform a descending sort (Z to A or largest number to smallest).
1. Select a single cell anywhere in the range that you want to sort.
2. On the Data tab, in the Sort & Filter group, choose Sort.
3. The Sort dialog box appears.
4. In the Sort by list, select the first column on which you want to sort.
5. In the Sort On list, select either Values, Cell Color, Font Color, or Cell Icon.
6. In the Order list, select the order that you want to apply to the sort operation —
alphabetically or numerically ascending or descending (that is, A to Z or Z to A for text
or lower to higher or higher to lower for numbers).
For more information about how to sort data, see Sort data in a range or table .
1. Select the data that you want to filter.
2. On the Data tab, in the Sort & Filter group, click Filter.
3. Click the arrow in the column header to display a list in which you can make filter
choices.
4. To select by values, in the list, clear the (Select All) check box. This removes the check
marks from all the check boxes. Then, select only the values you want to see, and click
OK to see the results.
For more information about how to filter data, see Filter data in a range or table.
1. Click the Save button on the Quick Access Toolbar, or press Ctrl+S.
The preview window displays the pages in black and white or in color, depending on
your printer settings.
If you don’t like how your pages will be printed, you can change page margins or add
page breaks.
3. Click Print.
1. On the File tab, choose Options, and then choose the Add-Ins category.
2. Near the bottom of the Excel Options dialog box, make sure that Excel Add-ins is
selected in the Manage box, and then click Go.
3. In the Add-Ins dialog box, select the check boxes the add-ins that you want to use, and
then click OK.
If Excel displays a message that states it can't run this add-in and prompts you to install
it, click Yes to install the add-ins.