| Excel Productivity Tips You'll Use Often |
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| Written by Kathy Yakal | |||
| Friday, 23 September 2011 16:22 | |||
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Work Safe and Avoid Disasters When you're formatting an Excel workbook or worksheet, cutting and pasting data from other sheets or reorganizing a spreadsheet for any reason, there's always a risk of losing data through errors you make in the process. Protect your hard work by doing all formatting and reorganizing in a working copy instead of modifying your primary copy. Take the following steps before getting started with changes: 1. Click the Office button (2007) or the File Tab (2010), and then select Save As. Get a Fresh Start With Formatting Formatting a workbook or worksheet can be a hassle. This is especially true if you've copied parts of other formatted worksheets into your current workbook. Sometimes, experimenting with formatting can lead to unexpected results. In some cases, major formatting changes are requested after you've already formatted the sheet. It's often faster and simpler to remove all existing formatting and start over. To do this: 1. Select the range of cells where you want to remove formatting, or press Ctrl-A to select the entire worksheet. Share Your Worksheet the Easy Way When you need to share a worksheet or workbook with others, it's important to provide it in a format that is easily accessible. Not everyone has Excel installed, and some may have an older version than Excel 2007 or 2010. To make sure the recipient can view your worksheet and will not be able to modify it, you can publish it as an Adobe PDF format document directly from Excel 2007 or 2010. Almost everyone can view these files, so you can attach your worksheet to an email or send it another way and be sure it will be seen. The steps are simple: 1. Click the Office button (2007) or the File Tab (2010), and then click Save As. Create an Instant Web Page From Your Worksheet or Workbook If you need to add a worksheet to an existing website, the easiest way is to let Excel create an HTML file. In almost all cases, all elements of your worksheet will appear as you see them, complete with charts and other elements. You can add this file to your website, then link to it within the site or include the link in emails. This tip works best on simpler worksheets. To convert your worksheet to HTML format: 1. With the worksheet open in Excel, click the Office button (2007) or the File Tab (2010), and then click Save As. Use Excel Charts and Graphics Anywhere Excel does a great job of creating charts and other graphics from your data. Often, a chart or other graphic you've created carefully in Excel is an excellent way to depict the data you want to share. Most Excel users aren't aware that you can turn your charts and other graphical elements into standalone JPEG or GIF graphics files, capable of being used anywhere. The process is simple and requires only a few seconds. Here's how: 1. Select the chart or other Excel graphic by clicking on a blank area in it. Reduce the Number of Pages When Printing From Excel If you need a compact printed version of an Excel worksheet or workbook, there's a little known way to shrink your printout down to size. This is especially useful if you just need a printout for reference purposes when you're on the road. Fewer pages with good readability can be a real plus when you're not in your office. Excel will shrink all elements of the workbook to fit the number of pages you specify. You can usually cut the number of pages in half without sacrificing readability. Here's how to do this: 1. With your workbook loaded in Excel, click the Office (2007) button or the File tab (2010), and then hover your mouse pointer over Print in Excel 2007 and select Print Preview. In Excel 2010, the preview appears automatically when you click Print.
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About the Author: Brett Owens is CEO and Co-Founder of Chrometa, a Sacramento, Calif.-based provider of software that records activity in real time. Previously marketed to the legal community, Chrometa is branching out to accounting prospects; gains include the ability to discover previously undocumented billable time, save time on billing reconciliation and improve personal productivity. Brett is also blogger and founder at CommodityBullMarket.com and ContraryInvesting.com, as well as a regular contributor to two leading financial media sites, SeekingAlpha.com and BeforeItsNews.com. |