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Excel has a lot in common with other programs you may have used, including the other Microsoft 365 applications. Its interface is easy to navigate yet loaded with powerful features designed to save you time and work. Getting dialed in on all the basics will enable you to spend more of your time analyzing the meaning of your data, which is the important thing, right? This chapter introduces you to the "must know" skills for kicking off your work in Excel. It covers essential command and navigation features of the user interface, reviews key techniques for creating and working with files, and guides you through getting data into sheet cells and making selections.
Windows 10 gives you a few options for starting a program so that you can get to work. You may already have your preference for how to start up, but if not, you can try one of these methods:
1.1 Select Excel App when using Windows Search to start Excel.
If using the Start menu to launch Excel isn't for you, then you can pin an Excel button to the taskbar. With Excel open, right-click its button on the taskbar, and then choose Pin to Taskbar. Click the pinned Excel button on the taskbar to start the program. If you decide you want to unpin the button, right-click it on the taskbar and choose Unpin from Taskbar.
When Excel opens, it prompts you to create a new document or open an existing one. The later section called "Working with Files" provides more details about those choices. For now, you could just click the Blank Workbook thumbnail to create a new file.
When you've finished all your work in Excel for the day, you should close or exit the program. You could shut down Windows without closing Excel, but it's a better practice to close Excel first to ensure you've saved all your work. As when starting Excel, you have these options for closing or exiting the program:
To close the current file without exiting Excel, click the File tab near the upper-left corner of the Excel window, and then choose Close. If you have a file with unsaved work open and exit Excel or close the file, a message box asks whether you want to save changes to the file. You can click the Save or Don't Save button as needed.
If you have multiple Excel files open, closing one of them doesn't close down Excel overall. You have to close every open Excel file to make sure you've completely exited the program.
When you're writing a document in a word processor, you can get away with just typing a lot and not knowing the nuances of how to get around. Excel is trickier than that. Some of the features of its interface are important to being able to work accurately in the program, especially when it comes to creating formulas that calculate or organizing data effectively. While some of what this section covers may seem familiar based on your work with other programs, especially other Microsoft 365 programs, you might learn about a few unique Excel interface features that offer powerful shortcuts.
At first glance, the Excel screen can look a bit busy with an extreme number of buttons and letters and numbers and boxes. Each sheet in an Excel file has more than 16,000 columns and 1,000,000 rows, for a total of more than 17 billion cells! That sounds overwhelming, so I'm going to zero in on the key screen features you need to know to work in Excel, which are shown in Figure 1.2. Later parts of the book will cover other features of the Excel interface in discussions about particular tasks and actions.
1.2 You will work with these tools in Excel.
Here's what you need to know about the screen features shown in Figure 1.2:
I'll use a type of shorthand throughout the book to tell you which ribbon command to choose, giving the tab, group, and specific button. For example, if I say "Choose Data ? Sort & Filter ? Filter," it means to click the Data tab on the ribbon, look for the Sort & Filter group of commands, and in that group, click Filter. Command sequences can be longer if a list or menu appears.
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