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- excel - What does an exclamation mark before a cell reference mean . . .
In a text about Excel I have read the following: =SUM(!B1:!K1) when defining a name for a cell and this was entered into the Refers To field What does this mean?
- What does -- do in Excel formulas? - Stack Overflow
Boolean values TRUE and FALSE in excel are treated as 1 and 0, but we need to convert them To convert them into numbers 1 or 0, do some mathematical operation
- Parsing an ISO8601 date time (including TimeZone) in Excel
I need to parse an ISO8601 date time format with an included timezone (from an external source) in Excel VBA, to a normal Excel Date As far as I can tell, Excel XP (which is what we're using) does
- What does the @ symbol mean in Excel formula (outside a table)
Excel has recently introduced a huge feature called Dynamic arrays And along with that, Excel also started to make a " substantial upgrade " to their formula language One such upgrade is the addition of @ operator which is called Implicit Intersection Operator How is it used The @ symbol is already used in table references to indicate implicit intersection Consider the following formula in
- Quadratic and cubic regression in Excel - Stack Overflow
Now Excel will calculate regressions using both x 1 and x 2 at the same time: How to actually do it The impossibly tricky part there's no obvious way to see the other regression values In order to do that you need to: select the cell that contains your formula: extend the selection the left 2 spaces (you need the select to be at least 3 cells
- excel - Return values from the row above to the current row - Stack . . .
To solve this problem in Excel, usually I would just type in the literal row number of the cell above, e g , if I'm typing in Cell A7, I would use the formula =A6 Then if I copied that formula to other cells, they would also use the row of the previous cell Another option is to use Indirect(), which resolves the literal statement inside to be a formula You could use something like
- Using If cell contains #N A as a formula condition.
I need help on my Excel sheet How can I declare the following IF condition properly? if A1 = "n a" then C1 = B1 else if A1 != "n a" or has value(int) then C1 = A1*B1
- What are the RGB codes for the Conditional Formatting Styles in Excel . . .
I've got some cells that I have Conditionally Formatted to Excel's standard 'Bad' Style (Dark red text, light red fill) In another column I have cells that I have created a Conditional Formatting formula for I also want to code these to match the 'Bad' Style, but there isn't an option to use the pre-defined dark red text, light red fill
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