This tutorial is copyrighted by the Department of Computer Science at The University of Rhode
Island. It may be freely copied and used providing that acknowledgement is given to the URI
Dept. of Computer Science and that it is not used for profit. Questions should be sent to Dr.
Fay-Wolfe (wolfe@cs.uri.edu).
Microsoft Excel is an electronic spreadsheet program.
You might of heard the terms "spreadsheet" and "worksheet".
People generally use them interchangebly. To remain
consistent with Microsoft and other publishers the term
worksheet refers to the row-and-column matrix
sheet on which you work upon and the term spreadsheet
refers to this type of computer application. In addition,
the term workbook will refer to the book of
pages that is the standard Excel document.The workbook
can contain worksheets,chart sheets, or macro modules.
The Spreadsheet Concept
The Workbook
Most of the Excel screen is devoted to the display of
the workbook. The workbook consists of grids and columns.
The intersection of a row and column is a rectangular
area called a cell.
Cells
The workbook is made up of cells.There is a cell at the
intersection of each row and column.A cell can contain a value,
a formula, or a text entry. A text entry is used to label or explain the
contents of the workbook. A value entry can either be a constant or the
value of a formula. The value of a formula will change when the components
(arguments) of the formula change. The appeal of spreadsheet
programs is the ability to change one value and watch all other values
that depend on that first value automatically change when the spreadsheet
is recalculated.
Rows, Columns, and Sheets
The Excel worksheet contains 16,384 rows that extend
down the worksheet, numbered 1 through 16384.
The Excel worksheet contains 256 columns that extend
across the worksheet, lettered A through Z, AA through AZ,
BA through BZ, and continuing to IA through IZ.
The Excel worksheet can contain as many as 256 sheets,
labeled Sheet1 through Sheet256. The initial number of
sheets in a workbook,which can be changed by the user
is 16.
Cell References
Cell references are the combination of column
letter and row number. For example, the upper-left cell of
a worksheet is A1.
The Excel Window
You will learn about Excel's toolbars and entering
information into a workbook in the next part of the tutorial.
Throughout the tutorial you will have two windows
active; a window displaying the tutorial and
a window displaying an Excel workbook. Let's begin.
Find and Open Excel 97.
Resize and position then window displaying the
tutorial next to the blank Excel workbook.
Excel displays a new workbook when it is opened.
In a new workbook all the cells are empty. A
cell is active when the border is highlighted
in blue. When you enter information, the information
is stored in the active cell. Let's learn how
to enter information into a workbook.
Entering Information Into a Workbook
Entering Text and Constants
Click on the Excel window, select
a cell by clicking on it, and enter:
Excel is fun.
Observe the following:
Observe that your text is displayed in two
areas. Text is displayed in the active cell
within the workbook and it is also displayed
in the formula bar. The formula
bar is activated as soon as you begin typing
in a cell. At the far left is the reference
section, which will show the reference
of the active cell.
Next to the formula bar are the Cancel
and Enter buttons ().
The Cancel and Enter buttons are only
visible while Excel is in edit mode. Excel is in edit
mode anytime you begin typing an entry. To put Excel
in edit mode, click in the formula bar.
Within the Excel window, click in the formula
bar to display the Cancel and Enter buttons.
The Enter button enters the text you typed
into the cell. You could also press the Return key
on the keyboard.
If you want to edit the text you entered into a cell,
you click the formula bar, type your changes and click
on the Enter button.
The Cancel button cancels your changes.
Within the Excel window, click in the
formula bar and change the text: fun,
to outrageous.
Click on the Enter button to enter the
edit.
Click on the Cancel button to cancel the
edit.
Entering constant values is the same as entering
text, except that constant values are right-justified
by default. You will learn how to change this default
when you learn other formatting changes.
Entering Formulas
All formulas in Excel must begin with an equal sign (=).
When a formula is entered into a cell, the formula itself
is displayed in the formula bar when that cell is highlighted, and the result of the formula is displayed in
the actual cell. When you are typing in formulas, do
not type spaces; Excel will delete them.
Within the Excel window, select cell A2 and enter
the constant value 12. (Remeber to click the Enter
button or the Return key when you are done typing).
Within the Excel window, select cell A3 and enter
the constant value 15.
Within the Excel window, select cell A4 and click on
the formula bar.
Within the formula bar, enter an equal sign followed
by A3+A4.
Observe:
Click on the Enter button or press the
Return key to enter the formula.
Your worksheet should look as follows:
Excel displays the result of the formula in cell A4.
Within the Excel window, select cell A3 and change
the number 15 to the number 40, and enter the edit.
The formula value should have changed in cell A4 to
the number 52.
Now that you know how to enter information into
an Excel workbook it is time to create a simple
workbook.