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Excel 2002 for Dummies

Excel 2002 for Dummies

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Author: Greg, Phd Harvey
Publisher: For Dummies
Category: Book

List Price: $21.99
Buy New: $6.81
You Save: $15.18 (69%)



New (16) Used (21) from $0.98

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 1 reviews
Sales Rank: 78943

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 384
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.3
Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 7.4 x 0.9

ISBN: 0764508229
Dewey Decimal Number: 005.369
UPC: 785555059849
EAN: 9780764508226
ASIN: 0764508229

Publication Date: June 15, 2001
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Digital - Excel 2002 For Dummies (For Dummies (Computer/Tech))

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Just because electronic spreadsheets like Excel 2002 have become almost as commonplace on today's personal computers as word processors and games doesn't mean that they're either well understood or well used. If you're one of the many folks who has Office XP on your computer but doesn't know a spreadsheet from a bedsheet, this means that Excel 2002 is just sitting there taking up a lot of space. Well, it's high time to change all that.

One look at the Excel 2002 screen (with all its boxes, buttons, and tabs), and you realize how much stuff is going on there. Excel 2002 For Dummies will help you make some sense out of the rash of icons, buttons, and boxes that you're going to be facing day after day. And when you ready to go beyond spreadsheet basics, this guide will also introduce you to

  • Conjuring up charts
  • Inserting graphics
  • Designing a database
  • Converting spreadsheets into Web pages

Most of all, Excel 2002 For Dummies covers the fundamental techniques that you need to know in order to create, edit, format, and print your own worksheets. In this book, you'll find all the information that you need to keep your head above water as you accomplish the everyday tasks that people do with Excel. This down-to-earth guide covers all these topics and more:

  • Creating a spreadsheet from scratch
  • Document recovery
  • Formatting fundamentals
  • Making corrections (and how to undo them)
  • Retrieving data from your spreadsheets
  • Protecting your documents
  • Demystifying formulas

Now, even if your job doesn't involve creating worksheets with a lot of fancy financial calculations or lah-dee-dah charts, you probably have plenty of things for which you could and should be using Excel. For instance, you may have to keep lists of information or maybe even put together tables of information for your job. Excel is a great list keeper and one heck of a table maker. You can use Excel anytime you need to keep track of products that you sell, clients who you service, employees who you oversee, or you name it.


Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars plain talking explanations   March 1, 2005
 15 out of 16 found this review helpful

Harvey hopes to offer you an easy acquaintance with the many features of Excel. As with other books in this series, little prior knowledge of this subject is assumed. Instead, he describes in plain terms what many common capabilities exist. Some of these may indeed be used with formidable complexity, like having a cell be an intricate function of many other cells. But by offering simple examples, you can see how to utilise these features.

By the way, this example of a cell being a function of one or more other cells is of course the key idea of a spreadsheet. It dates back to when they only existed in hardcopy form. While Excel now offers a large portfolio of features, this is still the most important and fundamental one. If you study this book, ensure that you have this knowledge well understood.



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