Conditional formatting on Excel 2008. Discussion in 'Mac Apps and Mac App Store' started by R1CH4RD 21, Jul 31, 2009. Download Microsoft Office 2008 for Mac 12.3.6 Update from Official Microsoft Download Center Office 365 Experience the best of Office with the latest versions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and more.
Hey, I was googling for a solution to this problem and found this thread. After trying out a bunch of different things, it seems the thing to do is to get your frequency values, and then copy and paste only the data for your bins and your frequency values. Now, select all of your bin values and format them as text. Not done yet! Stupid excel still wants to read them as numbers, and it won't let you use them as x-values unless they are recognized as text, so I just put a space in front of every number. After that, select your data, click the stacked bar thing and it should spit out a bar graph with your bins as x-values, and your frequencies as frequencies.
Now you just gotta fiddle with the spacing until you get it looking good. Now if only it were possible to make box-plots! I have no idea how the hell excel is so popular, it really is a tedious program and completely non-intuitive.
Click to expand.Alas, there is no alternative. The same is also true for many inconveniences in our life, including, for example, traffic: that highway is jammed not because everyone enjoys using it, but because there is no alternative. Speaking about Excel, it is probably the only product of Microsoft's provenance that is actually useable and powerful. Too bad it practically requires a geek to take advantage of all its power. Even worse, the latest iteration of Excel, the 08, is a turd when compared with that from 04.
Hey there and welcome to this tutorial on Office 2008 from the Virtual Training Company. My name is Brian Culp and I will be your instructor, your tour guide as we look at all the different products in the suite of applications. Of course, this is the update of Office for the Macintosh and I thought about putting that in the first slide here, but of course you don't need to be told that.
You know you're not looking at a product that is built for the PC. You're of course looking at something, a suite of application that is built for the Macintosh.
And so that's what we look at here. In fact, we'll just go into a slideshow to introduce this topic and this tutorial. Once again, my name is Brian Culp.
I've authored several tutorials for the Virtual Training Company, including the previous version of Office for the Macintosh, Office 2004 and I want to take just a few moments to tell you what's coming up in this tutorial. We'll first spend our introductory chapters talking about three applications; PowerPoint, Word and Excel and ways to get you up and running very quickly to do what those products are meant for. With PowerPoint, we'll be starting a slideshow presentation.
With Word we'll be creating a word processing document and with Excel we'll be working with spreadsheets right away. Then kind of in the middle of the tutorial we look at Entourage and I split Entourage into two different groupings here; email and everything else. This is, of course, the time management and email management program that is a big part of daily life for most users or certainly a lot of users of the Macintosh. So once you learn those tips and tricks and use of Entourage, we'll go then into power user knowledge, which might just get you a round of applause on each of these three other applications; PowerPoint, Word and Excel and you'll learn how to do things like you just witnessed in this module here and that being the ability to add transitions and even audio effects to slides. So those are the kinds of topics we'll hit on as we talk about power use knowledge for each of these three applications.
And then finally, we'll end with some time-saving tips and tricks for, again, each of those big three. We'll probably sprinkle in some Entourage as well, but because these applications so tightly integrate, most of the time-saving tips and tricks that I show you in one application will certainly apply to the others as well. So that's what's coming up in this tutorial. It's a great use of your time to get you up and running quickly and to also get you some very specific or very powerful knowledge in a short amount of time. So stay tuned and I think you'll really like this tutorial.
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