FastTips for Excel 3.0 for Windows: Usage Q&ALast reviewed: November 4, 1994Article ID: Q87952 |
Summary:
Microsoft Product Support Services Application Note (Text File) WE0569: USAGE QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Revision Date: 8/92 No Disk IncludedThe following information applies to Microsoft Excel for Windows version 3.0.
-------------------------------------------------------------------- | INFORMATION PROVIDED IN THIS DOCUMENT AND ANY SOFTWARE THAT MAY | | ACCOMPANY THIS DOCUMENT (collectively referred to as an | | Application Note) IS PROVIDED "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY | | KIND, EITHER EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO | | THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND/OR FITNESS FOR A | | PARTICULAR PURPOSE. The user assumes the entire risk as to the | | accuracy and the use of this Application Note. This Application | | Note may be copied and distributed subject to the following | | conditions: 1) All text must be copied without modification and | | all pages must be included; 2) If software is included, all files | | on the disk(s) must be copied without modification [the MS-DOS(R) | | utility DISKCOPY is appropriate for this purpose]; 3) All | | components of this Application Note must be distributed together; | | and 4) This Application Note may not be distributed for profit. | | | | Copyright 1992 Microsoft Corporation. All Rights Reserved. | | Microsoft and MS-DOS are registered trademarks and Autosum and | | Windows are trademarks of Microsoft Corporation. | -------------------------------------------------------------------- 1. Q. Every time I try to enter data, such as "5 Days Remaining," in a worksheet, Microsoft Excel version 3.0 for Windows displays a message telling me an error exists in the formula. Also, the HOME, END, and CTRL keys no longer work as they did previously. A. The most likely reason for this behavior is that Microsoft Excel version 3.0 for Windows is in alternate navigation mode. The following three-step procedure corrects this problem: Step 1. From the Options menu, choose Workspace to restore Excel keyboard functionality. Step 2. Clear the Alternate Navigation Keys check box. To do this, either click the check box with the mouse, or press K on the keyboard. Step 3. Choose the OK button or press ENTER. For more information on alternate navigation keys, please refer to pages 46-55 of the "Microsoft Excel User's Guide" for version 3.0. 2. Q. All my new worksheets use the same font for screen display and printed output. How can I use a new default font so that any new worksheets I create display and print using the font of my choice? A. The Helvetica 10-point font is the default that Microsoft Excel version 3.0 for Windows uses with Microsoft Windows version 3.0. The MS Sans Serif 10-point font is the default that Microsoft Excel 3.0 uses with Windows version 3.1. The default font in Microsoft Excel 3.0 can be changed by modifying the EXCEL.INI file, which is located in the WINDOWS directory. The following three-step process changes the default font used in any new worksheet you create: Step 1. Quit Microsoft Excel 3.0. From the Program Manager File menu, choose Run. In the Command Line dialog box, type the following: notepad excel.ini This opens the Microsoft Windows Notepad program and the EXCEL.INI file. Step 2. Insert a line after the [Microsoft Excel] section of the EXCEL.INI file, and type the following line: font=fontname,size where "fontname" is the name of the font, as spelled in the Font dialog box in Microsoft Excel 3.0, and "size" is the point size of the font to be used. Step 3. From the File menu, choose Save. From the Notepad File menu, choose Exit. Restart Microsoft Excel 3.0. Microsoft Excel 3.0 now uses the font you selected as the default for any new worksheet. For more information on the EXCEL.INI file, please refer to the README.TXT file in your EXCEL directory. 3. Q. How can I import text files into Microsoft Excel version 3.0 for Windows? A. If you are importing a text file from a third-party application into Microsoft Excel version 3.0 for Windows, it is usually necessary to convert the file to a usable format. There are three different methods of importing text files into Excel. Which method you use depends on the type of delimiter used in the text file. Method 1. If the file has a column delimiter that is either a tab or a comma, use the following three-step process: Step 1. From the File menu, choose Open. Step 2. Select your file from the list of files or type the filename in the File Name box, then choose the Text button. Step 3. Under Column Delimiter, select the appropriate option button (Tab or Comma) for your file, then choose the OK button twice. Now Microsoft Excel 3.0 can open the file correctly. You can also rename the file with a .TXT extension (if tab- delimited) or a .CSV extension (if comma-delimited). Microsoft Excel 3.0 can recognize the format from the file extension and open the file correctly. Method 2. If the file has a column delimiter other than a tab or a comma (such as a semicolon), use the following four-step procedure to bring the file into Microsoft Excel 3.0 as a text file and then parse it using the Microsoft Excel 3.0 add-in macro FLATFILE.XLA: Step 1. From the File menu, choose Open. The add-in macro FLATFILE.XLA is located in the LIBRARY subdirectory of the EXCEL directory. Once you are in the LIBRARY subdirectory, select FLATFILE.XLA in the File Name box, then choose the OK button. Step 2. From the File menu, choose Open, type the name of your text file, then choose the OK button. Once the text file is open, select column A with the mouse by clicking the column heading. If you do not have a mouse, select column A by positioning the cursor in cell A1 and pressing CTRL+SPACEBAR. Step 3. From the Data menu, choose Smart Parse. The Smart Parse command is available only if FLATFILE.XLA is open. Step 4. If the columns in your text file are delimited by one or more spaces, choose the Blank Space option button. If the delimiter is a forward slash, type a slash character. If the delimiter is a different character, choose Other and type the character. To remove the extra spaces between the fields in a flat file, select the Remove Extra Blank Spaces box. When you choose the OK button, each field in each row is parsed out to its own cell. For more information on opening files into Excel, refer to pages 338 through 340 of the "Microsoft Excel User's Guide." For more information on the FLATFILE.XLA add-in macro, refer to pages 683-684 in Appendix B of the "Microsoft Excel User's Guide" for version 3.0. 4. Q. Can Microsoft Excel version 3.0 for Windows consolidate several spreadsheets into a single summary worksheet? A. Microsoft Excel version 3.0 for Windows can automatically create summary worksheets using the Data Consolidation command. To do this, use the following five-step procedure: Step 1. Open all the worksheets you want to consolidate. Step 2. Activate the summary worksheet by choosing your summary sheet from the list of open worksheets on the Window menu or open a new worksheet by choosing New from the File menu, selecting Worksheet, and choosing the OK button. Step 3. From the Data menu, choose Consolidate. The Data Consolidation dialog box appears. Step 4. Activate the first worksheet you want to consolidate by choosing it from the Window menu. Select the range of cells you want to consolidate. Step 5. Once you select the entire range of cells on the first worksheet you are consolidating, choose the Add button. Repeat this step until all your worksheets have been added to the list of references in the Data Consolidation dialog box. After all references have been successfully added, choose the OK button. For more information, please refer to pages 328-334 of the "Microsoft Excel User's Guide" for version 3.0. 5. Q. How can I export a file that I created in Microsoft Excel version 3.0 for Windows as a text file? A. There are two different methods of exporting text files in Microsoft Excel 3.0. The method you use depends upon the type of column delimiter you need in the text file. Method 1. If your mainframe system can read tab- or comma- delimited files, you can use the following two-step process to save the file in text file format: Step 1. From the File menu, choose Save As. Step 2. Choose the Options button with your mouse, or press ALT+O. In the File Format box, select either Text (for a tab- delimited file) or CSV (for a comma-delimited file). Method 2. If you want to save the file as a flat file (or a file that is delimited using spaces between columns), use the FLATFILE.XLA add-in macro and the following three-step procedure: Step 1. From the File menu, choose Open. The add-in macro FLATFILE.XLA is located in the LIBRARY subdirectory of the EXCEL directory. Once you are in the LIBRARY subdirectory, select FLATFILE.XLA in the File Name box, then choose the OK button. Step 2. From the File menu, choose Open, type the name of your text file, then choose the OK button. Once the text file is open, select column A with the mouse by clicking the column heading. If you do not have a mouse, select column A by positioning the cursor in cell A1 and pressing CTRL+SPACEBAR. Step 3. From the Data menu, choose Export. (The Export option is available only if FLATFILE.XLA is open.) FLATFILE.XLA prompts you to type a filename. Once you have entered a name and chosen the OK button, FLATFILE.XLA creates the text file on your hard drive. This file now can be imported to any application that requires an ASCII flat file. For more information on saving files in Microsoft Excel 3.0, refer to pages 135-143 of the "Microsoft Excel User's Guide" for version 3.0. For more information on the FLATFILE.XLA add-in macro, refer to pages 683-684 in Appendix B of the "Microsoft Excel User's Guide" for version 3.0. 6. Q. How do I use the new Autosum(TM) feature in Microsoft Excel version 3.0 for Windows? A. The Autosum feature requires a mouse. If you do not have a mouse, you cannot use this feature. If you do have a mouse, use the following five-step procedure: Step 1. Select a cell directly below or to the right of a column of numbers. Step 2. Choose the Autosum button on the Microsoft Excel 3.0 tool bar. (The tool bar is positioned directly below the menu bar; the Autosum button resembles the Greek letter sigma and is the fifth button from the left.) Step 3. Excel activates the formula bar, inserts the SUM formula, and selects the cells that it believes you want to sum. Excel then selects all the cells in either a row or a column of data, until it encounters a blank cell or a cell containing nonnumeric data, such as a text label. Step 4. Excel makes it easy to identify which cells are being summed by placing a dotted moving border around the selected cells. If Excel selects cells that you do not want to sum, or has not selected all the cells you want to sum, simply adjust the selection by selecting the first cell in the range and dragging the mouse to the last cell in the range. Step 5. You can enter the SUM formula either by choosing the Autosum button a second time, or by pressing ENTER. |
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