Microsoft Excel relies on two fundamental reference types when addressing other cells. Absolute references -- which are denoted with a "$" -- lock a reference, so it will not change when copying the ...
Hidden reference shifts, invisible spaces, legacy function fragilities, and blanket error handling can quietly distort ...
One tiny symbol, but an absurd amount of spreadsheet drama.
Another example: If you have cells named SubTotal and Tax, and type a formula =subtotal*tax Excel converts that to =SubTotal*Tax automatically. Because of this and because Excel puts functions in all ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results