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This option covers all the
options to change the look of the data on your
worksheet, it also carries one part of the
two-part protection process to prevent data
being changed on the worksheet. (The
other part is detailed here).
Formatting cells alters the
'presentation' of cells on the worksheet, it
does not alter the underlying values.
For example you could have the underlying value
of 1.55499999 which you format to two decimal
places so it shows as 1.55, but any calculations
used on the cell will still use the full Excel
precision of 15 decimals. You should be aware of
this as if, for example, you have another cell
with the same value (1.55499999) formatted to
two decimals. You now have two cells that
look like they will produce a sum of
1.55+1.55=3.10, but with Excel using the full
precision of the underlying data you get 3.11!
To overcome this you can either use the ROUND
function, e.g.. =ROUND(A1,2)+ROUND(A2,2), in
your calculations or set the 'Precision as
displayed' setting on the 'Calculation' tab
under
Tools>Options... (I wouldn't recommend this
with anything other than sheets holding simple
currency data).
The menu presents a dialog
with six tabs, (as below). The explanation and
detail of each follows.
Number Tab
This first tab has all the settings to format
numbers, dates, times and text. If none of
the 'built-in' options, which are pretty
self-explanatory and user-friendly, give
your data the look you need, then, as in the
screenshot below, you can use a 'custom' format.
A custom format can have up to
four parts, separated by semi-colons, (;). These
parts are the formats for:
- Positive Numbers
- Negative Numbers
- Zeroes
- Text.
These formats are made up of special
'placeholders' which display data a certain way
or reserve space for certain data. Here is not
the place to go into every placeholder, as there
are many, but these can easily be found in help
under Custom Number Formats.
Here is the building of one example.
£#,##0.00 - This has a symbol (£) followed a
placeholder for a number (#). The # placeholder
displays a number or nothing if it is an
insignificant zero. We then have the thousand
separator, (,), followed by two further
placeholders for numbers which will not show
insignificant zeros, (##) The next placeholder is
a zero (0), this will show either the number
entered or an insignificant zero. We have
a further two place holders (00), that will show
two decimal places or insignificant zeros if
there is no entry. As there is only one element
(positive numbers) to this format,
positive/negative numbers and zeroes will be
displayed the same. Some example of numbers
using this format are:
|
Entered |
Shown |
|
0 |
£0.00 |
|
1031.1 |
£1,031.10 |
|
-1031.1 |
£1,031.10 |
|
00.1 |
£0.10 |
|
A |
A |
If we now add to this a
second section for negative numbers, like so
£#,##0.00;[Red](£#,##0.00). We get the following
results.
|
Entered |
Shown |
|
0 |
£0.00 |
|
1031.1 |
£1,031.10 |
|
-1031.1 |
(£1,031.10) |
|
00.1 |
£0.10 |
|
A |
A |
The difference here is that
by adding a second part to the format, we are
specifying what to do with negative numbers. In
my case make them red ([Red]), there are several
colours you can use but they are pretty basic.
We also added brackets to signify negative.
We could equally have added a leading or
trailing minus sign.
Now lets add a third level to
handle zeroes.
£#,##0.00;[Red](£#,##0.00);[Blue]£00.00
Our numbers will now look
like so:
|
Entered |
Shown |
|
0 |
£00.00 |
|
1031.1 |
£1,031.10 |
|
-1031.1 |
(£1,031.10) |
|
00.1 |
£0.10 |
|
A |
A |
Note we added the colour blue
and a further leading zero, which will now show
as a zero even though it is insignificant.
Lastly we will add a placeholder for text.
£#,##0.00;[Red](£#,##0.00);[Blue]£00.00;"Enter
Numbers!"
|
Entered |
Shown |
|
0 |
£00.00 |
|
1031.1 |
£1,031.10 |
|
-1031.1 |
(£1,031.10) |
|
00.1 |
£0.10 |
|
A |
Enter Numbers! |
You can see now that every
time we enter any text, the text in the text
portion of the format is displayed.
Custom formats are also a
good way for example with weights of adding the
measure but still being able to do calculations
on the data, such as 0.00"kg", if you entered 1
in a cell would show as 1.00kg.
Formats, in this area also
have the ability to use criteria so 'values over
x are red and below y blue', etc, but you are
better in these cases to use 'Conditional
Formatting'.
A common request is for items
such as part no's which have leading zeroes,
such as 01234. When entered in Excel, Excel
naturally sees the input as a number and dumps
insignificant zeroes and you end up with 1234.
Providing all part numbers are say five digits
in length, a custom format of 00000 would show
any leading zeroes up to a total of 5, so a part
number of 00123 could be entered as 123 and
still show the desired result. (00123). If they
are multiple lengths you would need to
pre-format the cells as text and this would hold
any leading zeroes or prefix the entry with a
single apostrophe ('). This would not show but
would enter the data as text. Remember any data
entered or formatted as text, will be
'naturally' left aligned and cannot have
calculations performed on it, other than ones
which work with text such as COUNTA, LEN, RIGHT,
MID, LEFT, etc.
Dates and times
Dates and times in Excel can
be confusing. In truth they are not, they just
take an explanation and they are then pretty
easy. Formatting is all that makes dates and
times appear as such in Excel. Dates are
actually whole numbers from January 1st 1900,
day 1 (providing you are using the default date
system and not the 1904 date system under
Tools>Options>Calculation). Today, (1st December 2004), is 38322!
That is the 38,322nd day since 1st January 1900.
Excel will format dates automatically providing
they are entered in a format it recognises, with
dashes or slashes in between. (01/01/2000 or
01-01-2000). Once you have entered a date, to
prove the above theory, format the cell as
'general' and you will see the resultant date
'serial number'. Times are decimals of a day so,
for example, 12 noon is half a day or .5! so
midday today was 38322.5.
This allows fairly simply
operations, such as adding days, etc. (e.g.
01/01/2001+7=08/01/2001). In time card
applications it is also necessary to get Excel
times to whole numbers to multiply them, for
example, by an hourly rate, to do this you
simply multiply the hour entered in Excel by 24,
so a finish time of 17:00 and a start time
of 09:00 when subtracted from each other in
Excel would give a time of 08:00 which is
correct, if you then want to multiply that 8
hours worked by the hourly rate of £10.00 would
naturally leave you with a result, when
formatted as currency of £3.33 for the days
work. (= unhappy workers!). To arrive at the
correct answer, simply get the decimal 'hours'
up to whole numbers. There are 24 hours in
a day, so =(Time_Result*24)*Hourly_Rate, would
equal the correct £80.00. The same can be said
of minutes, (need to be multiplied by 60 and
then 24 (1440)) or seconds (Seconds*60*60*24
(86400))
Formatting of times in
Excel is also automatic if you enter them with
colons(:) between, e.g. to enter thirteen
minutes and thirteen seconds past three in the
morning, you would enter 3:13:13 and Excel would
understand it without any further formatting. If
you wish to enter a time after noon, you can
either enter in military, (24hr) time, e.g.
15:13:13 or post-fix the time with a space and
then A or P (AM/PM).
Excels auto entry of dates
and times will be based on the date settings in
your windows control panel. But you can overcome
this again, either by looking under the
date/time options or by type a 'custom format',
e.g. to display 01/01/2000 as Monday 1 January
2001, we would use dddd d mmmm yyyy.
Experimenting will help and as you build any
formula the dialog will show you an example of
how the formula will look.
Lastly on times. You will
occasionally find you are summing times and if
hours go over 24 they will actually make a day
so adding 12:00 (which Excel is holding as .5)
and 12:00 will give you an answer of 1. One we
remember is 1st January 1900, so adding those
two times together will result in 01/01/00!!! To
overcome this you use a custom format, either
[h] or [hh]:mm:ss.00 (The last two zeroes
actually show 10ths of a second!). It's
the [] that will stop Excel from incrementing
hours over 24 to days. Likewise, you can use [m]
or [mm] to stop minutes over 60 going to hours
and [s] or [ss] to stop seconds incrementing to
minutes.
Alignment Tab
From here you have the
ability to line up your cell entries in Excel.
Control in here improved dramatically in version
97, with the addition of 'Orientation'.

Horizontal alignment can be set to 'general'.
This means the default alignment of right for
numbers and left for text. You also have left,
right, justified, and distributed, each of which
can be customised by using the 'indent' spinner.
Each positive increment will move the text right
and if using 'distributed' will increase the
spacing between letters. 'Fill' will fill the
current cell width with the text in the cell.
Vertical alignment allows you to move text to
the top, centre, bottom, etc of the cell. This
is obviously only effective if the row width is
greater that the height of the font.
The 'Text control' allows you to 'wrap' text
onto several lines, Excel will normally size the
rows to fit when using this option. You can
'shrink' the text to fit the current cell width
and 'merge' several cells together. This is
great for 'heading' several columns but should
be used with care as it renders a lot of
features unusable, such as insert and also
looses the intuitive view of what cell the
actual entry is in. (That is, it may appear that
the text is in E1 when actually it is in A1).
'Orientation' allows you to rotate the text
through 180 with an increment
of 1°. Here is an example of the
features in use.

Font
Tab
This allows you to set the
'typeface' of the selected text/cell/cells. Most
of this is self-explanatory, you can check
the 'Normal font' checkbox to quickly return to
Excel's default font.

Border Tab
A confusion often reigns
between borders and gridlines. Excels gridlines
are only visible if the cell has no 'fill'. As
soon as you do this the 'gridlines' will not
show and the only way of imitating this is to
apply borders. These are often also used in
financial spreadsheets to make separator lines
between totals. There are several 'frequently
used' presets and a wysiwyg box allowing you to
customise the borders of the cell(s) that have
lines. (Top, bottom, left, right, diagonal,
etc.)
You have control over the
style, weight, colour and position of the line.

Patterns Tab
Sets the 'fill' for a cell or
range of cells. You are very restricted
currently as to the number of colours you can
display in Excel (56), but these can be extended
by use of 'patterns' in the drop-down.

Protection Tab
Protection in Excel is a
two-stage process in Excel. All cells are
'locked' by default. If you then protect a sheet
via 'Tools>Protection...',
you will 'lock' users from editing all
cells. If you uncheck this box on any cells in a
sheet and then protect the worksheet, you will
be able to edit these cells. Equally you will be
able to navigate unlocked cells only using the
tab key.
Selecting 'Hidden' on any
cells will hide the formula from the
formula bar. This is handy if:
-
You don't want users to
see the underlying formula
-
You have a huge formula
which when the cell is selected shows in the
formula bar and obscures much of the
worksheet.

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