AHHHHH! 35+ year spreadsheet user here and suddenly @Sum is a dead function on my spreadsheets. I have to =sum to get the formula going. WHY??? What happened? What did I do???? I cannot seem to word my google search in a way to have this fix come up - lol
I feel your pain went through it last week I have to retrain myself to use =
Now after 40 yrs of using @Sum so mad my I.T. Person doesn’t understand my frustration
@ still works for me... but maybe I'm working on an older(?) version of Excel:
Microsoft® Excel® for Microsoft 365 MSO (Version 2302 Build 16.0.16130.20806) 32-bit
WYSIWYG anybody? I predate that also. You could use most of a ream of paper trying to format one small spreadsheet when you couldn’t even see the results of your formatting on the screen
At work, we had to do a workaround with an API call from command line. over half of the users didn't know what the command prompt was and keep forgetting. I finally did a small .exe file for them to run from Windows Explorer.
I find it best to pick a product and avoid the constant updates. Mostly the updates are just to generate revenue and add seldom used features most never use. Honestly who needs 300 different fonts? 90% of the features in most spreadsheet programs are for things I never use and likely that way for most people. I don't run a business from it or have 100,000 records in some database to keep track of. I found a free version online from some other company a few years ago and have been very happy with it. I can't recall them ever making any updates which is fine by me. I use it mostly for a few basic spreadsheet functions like math or perhaps some graphs.
The new update is adding more security to my macros.
I now have to walk people through making a trusted location. It's not to bad at first I thought I was going to have to digital sign everything, which to this day I have yet to figure out how to do properly.
I know but many of us predate that and using a mouse in a spreadsheet. They carried over the keystrokes that have been ingrained in so many of us now aging population
I know but many of us predate that and using a mouse in a spreadsheet. They carried over the keystrokes that have been ingrained in so many of us now aging population
I fought the mouse as long as I could. In the early 90s I was a hotel secretary and had a lot of Word Perfect macros that went keystroke by keystroke to write letters and contracts -- it was so cool that it would stop as I typed where it needed to be personalized, and then continued on when I hit Enter.
The advent of the mouse changed that philosophy, and rather keystroke by keystroke, it was the final outcome that macros did. I went kicking and screaming into Microsoft Word.
I'm FINALLY trying not to double space after periods and colons. I hate change.