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You're reading from  Exploring Microsoft Excel’s Hidden Treasures

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Published inSep 2022
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781803243948
Edition1st Edition
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David Ringstrom
David Ringstrom
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David Ringstrom

David Ringstrom exclaimed “Well, this is a stupid program, you can’t do anything with it” the first time that he launched Lotus 1-2-3 in 1987, unaware that pressing the slash key displayed the menu. That moment sealed his fate as he is now a nationally recognized spreadsheet expert. In 1991, David started a spreadsheet consulting practice that he still runs today. David has taught over 2,000 webinars and published hundreds of articles, all on Excel, and he imparts spreadsheet skills to thousands of college students each year. He is the author or coauthor of five books and the technical editor of over 40 books. He is a certified public accountant and a graduate of Georgia State University and has served in the United States Navy.
Read more about David Ringstrom

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Custom VBA worksheet functions

VBA is short for Visual Basic for Applications, which is the programming language that you can use in Excel for Windows and Excel for macOS to create macros and custom worksheet functions known as user-defined functions. Over the years, I’ve made a few half-hearted attempts to learn other programming languages, but I never got any traction because I find the ability to program in Excel to be practically limitless, at least for my purposes. With that said, I do write much less code these days, thanks to Power Query, which I will discuss in the next chapter.

Tip

Excel for the web does not support Visual Basic for Applications, which means you cannot even open workbooks that contain macros on that platform.

The Chapter 11 – BOX_VOLUME and XBOX_VOLUME.xlsm workbook already has the programming code installed for two user-defined worksheet functions. You may encounter the security warning shown in Figure 11.28, which means you won’...

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Exploring Microsoft Excel’s Hidden Treasures
Published in: Sep 2022Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781803243948

Author (1)

author image
David Ringstrom

David Ringstrom exclaimed “Well, this is a stupid program, you can’t do anything with it” the first time that he launched Lotus 1-2-3 in 1987, unaware that pressing the slash key displayed the menu. That moment sealed his fate as he is now a nationally recognized spreadsheet expert. In 1991, David started a spreadsheet consulting practice that he still runs today. David has taught over 2,000 webinars and published hundreds of articles, all on Excel, and he imparts spreadsheet skills to thousands of college students each year. He is the author or coauthor of five books and the technical editor of over 40 books. He is a certified public accountant and a graduate of Georgia State University and has served in the United States Navy.
Read more about David Ringstrom