If I purchase a computer without no Office products installed, can I purchase Excel, Word and perhaps Access separately? Or do I need to buy at least one Office package, namely Office Home and Student, which gets me Excel and Word, then buy Access separately?
Moving to the cloud: Like the other apps in the latest Mac Office suite, Excel 2016 lets you store, sync, and edit files online, via Microsoft's OneDrive cloud storage service. You can also save.
BTW, is there any differences between Excel and Word in Office Home/Student and Office Home/Business? It looks like I am asking about the 2010 versions of these products. But I would prefer the 2007 versions, if I can find them. Please specify if your answers are different for one version or the other. PS: What is Office Starter (Excel and Word only)? I see it in the Answers Forum pull-down menu, but I do not see it in the list of Office suites at microsoft.com.
Feature wise the programs are identical, except for Office Starter which has crippleware, but you aren't supposed to be able to buy it anyway. 2007 versions are only available as 'old stock' from various retailers You can purchase items individually but generally you would pay less by purchasing a complete Office suite (featuring the apps you require) Home & Student versions are the same as Home/Business or Pro versions, excepting H&S versions are not licensed for commercial use. A new PC may come with a preinstalled Trial of an Office version, buying an Office version with a new PC is not a good idea, since it will be an oem version, only licensed for that individual PC.
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The course is Microsoft Excel 2010, 2013 and 2016 compliant. Videos are recorded in Microsoft Excel 2016 and 2013 for PC, and where the user interface is significantly different, Excel 2010 videos are provided too. Once enrolled, our friendly support team and tutors are with any course related inquiries. Formula Anatomy Understanding Excel Formula Anatomy Cell Referencing Learn about working with absolute and relative cell referencing, and techniques for copying formulas. Function Anatomy Use to understand the anatomy of Excel functions, and what their components mean. Math Functions Learn basic math functions including SUM, ROUND and SUBTOTAL. Basic Statistics Learn basic statistical functions including COUNT, COUNTA, AVERAGE, MAX, MIN, MEDIAN and MODE.
Logic Functions Learn to build standalone logical IF functions, and make them more complex by nesting AND and OR within them. Text Functions Learn to break apart text with the LEFT, RIGHT, MID, FIND and SEARCH functions, and to combine text with the & character. Understanding Dates Understand how dates work in Excel using the TODAY, YEAR, MONTH, DAY and DATE functions. Understanding Time Understand how time works in Excel, and how to change from whole numbers into time increments and back again.
Formula Auditing Learn to work with formula auditing tools including tracing precedent and dependent cells and formula evaluation. Conditional Math Learn to use SUMIF, COUNTIF and SUMPRODUCT to add cells only when certain conditions are met. External Links Learn about creating and updating external links, and about the potential dangers of external links in Excel. Temporal Functions Learn to work with the EOMONTH and EDATE functions that easily shift dates from one month or year to another. VLOOKUP with Approximate Match Learn to use VLOOKUP to find an approximate match and return it or the corresponding value from another column. VLOOKUP with Exact Match Learn to use VLOOKUP to find an exact match and return it or the corresponding value from another column. Other Lookup Methods Learn to work with INDEX, MATCH and HLOOKUP, as alternatives to the VLOOKUP function.
Sorting Learn to sort data in Excel by a single column or by multiple columns. Filtering Learn to filter Excel data for specific words, dates, and apply multiple filters to a single data table.
Contiguous Data Learn tricks for consolidating your data so it's vertically contiguous (without blank rows) – for Tables, PivotTables and Charts. Naming Ranges Learn about creating named ranges, and the benefits of doing so.
Excel Tables Learn about creating Excel tables, and their advantages. Recording Macros Learn to record basic Excel macros to automate your actions (instead of doing them manually).
Cell Formatting Learn to work with the Format Cells dialog to apply text rotation and borders, and to center data across multiple cells. Outlining Learn about adding and working with Excel’s outlining tools to quickly hide irrelevant sections of your worksheet. Custom Number Formats Learn to build your own custom number formats to display dates, values and variances how you want to see them. Conditional Formats with Built-In Rules Learn to create top/bottom and highlight cell rules, as well as to apply icon sets and data bars.
Conditional Formats with Custom Rules Learn to create custom conditional formatting rules based on formulas. Building Column Charts Learn how to create an effective column chart by reducing ink and 'noise' that distract from the main messages. Building Bar Charts How to create an effective bar chart by reducing ink and noise that distract from the story. Building Pie Charts Learn how to build an effective pie chart, and when you should and shouldn’t use them.
Building Line Charts How to create an effective line chart through careful manipulation of chart elements to enhance its story telling ability. Building Combination Line and Area Charts When you want to graph 3 line series, but only want 2 in focus most of the time.