Saturday, December 13, 2014

MS Excel Basic Formulas

Formulas and Functions




A formula is an expression which calculates the value of a cell. Functions are predefined formulas and are already available in Excel.
For example, cell A3 below contains a formula which adds the value of cell A2 to the value of cell A1.
Formula Example

For example, cell A3 below contains the SUM function which calculates the sum of the range A1:A2.
Function Example

Enter a Formula

To enter a formula, execute the following steps.
1. Select a cell.
2. To let Excel know that you want to enter a formula, type an equal sign (=).
3. For example, type the formula A1+A2.
Enter a Formula
Tip: instead of typing A1 and A2, simply select cell A1 and cell A2.
4. Change the value of cell A1 to 3.
Recalculation
Excel automatically recalculates the value of cell A3. This is one of Excel's most powerful features!

Edit a Formula

When you select a cell, Excel shows the value or formula of the cell in the formula bar.
Formula Bar
1. To edit a formula, click in the formula bar and change the formula.
Edit a Formula
2. Press Enter.
Edited Formula

Operator Precedence

Excel uses a default order in which calculations occur. If a part of the formula is in parentheses, that part will be calculated first. It then performs multiplication or division calculations. Once this is complete, Excel will add and subtract the remainder of your formula. See the example below.
Operator Precedence
First, Excel performs multiplication (A1 * A2). Next, Excel adds the value of cell A3 to this result.
Another example,
Parentheses
First, Excel calculates the part in parentheses (A2+A3). Next, it multiplies this result by the value of cell A1.
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Copy/Paste a Formula

When you copy a formula, Excel automatically adjusts the cell references for each new cell the formula is copied to. To understand this, execute the following steps.
1. Enter the formula shown below into cell A4.
Copy a Formula Example
2a. Select cell A4, right click, and then click Copy (or press CTRL + c)...
Click on Copy
...next, select cell B4, right click, and then click Paste under 'Paste Options:' (or press CTRL + v).
Click on Paste
2b. You can also drag the formula to cell B4. Select cell A4, click on the lower right corner of cell A4 and drag it across to cell B4. This is much easier and gives the exact same result!
Drag a Formula
Result. The formula in cell B4 references the values in column B.
Copy a Formula Result

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