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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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The Spilled Range Operator

The average spreadsheet user spends a lot of time managing formulas in spreadsheets, particularly when new data is added to a list. The Table feature, which I discuss in Chapter 7, Automating Tasks with the Table Feature, offers one approach for eliminating this manual task. A second approach involves using the Spilled Range Operator (#) to create formulas that expand into more rows or contract into fewer rows based on changes in your data.

Nuance

You can only use the Spilled Range Operator in conjunction with formulas that reference results generated by a dynamic array function. This means the Spilled Range Operator is not available in Excel 2019 and earlier. If you use the Spilled Range Operator to reference data that is not in a dynamic array, the formula might return zero or a #VALUE! error.

The =SORT(UNIQUE(FILTER(C3:C12,D3:D12>H2))) formula in G6 of Figure 10.22 combines several concepts from this chapter to generate an alphabetical list...

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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