Excel 2019 For Dummies
Book image
Explore Book Buy On Amazon
If you’re looking for a quick rundown on what’s cool in Excel 2019, look no further! Just a cursory glance down the first few items in this list tells you that the thrust of the features is being able to be productive with Excel 2019 anytime, anywhere!
  • Complete cloud file support: The Excel Save (File→Save) and Open (File→Open) screens make it a snap to add your OneDrive or company’s SharePoint team site as a place to store and edit your favorite workbooks. After you manually save a workbook file to the cloud, the new AutoSave feature in Excel automatically saves all your editing changes to the workbook file as you work. You can then click the new Version History button (to the immediate right of the Share button on the row with the Ribbon tabs) to open a Version History task pane showing all the previously saved versions of the file that you can copy or restore.
    • By storing your Excel workbooks one of these places in the cloud, you’re assured access to them on any device running Excel 2019 (which can include your Windows tablet and smartphone along with your desktop and laptop PC).
    • Moreover, should you find yourself without a computing device running Excel 2019, you can still review and edit your workbooks using Excel Online in almost any major web browser.
  • Painless File Share options: File sharing and co-authoring spreadsheets with your coworkers in Excel has only gotten better and easier than ever. The Share button located on the right side of the row with the Ribbon tabs in the worksheet view makes it easier than ever to share your Excel workbooks online. Not only can you easily invite people to view and edit workbooks saved on your OneDrive in the cloud, you can also present them in online Skype meetings and post them to your favorite Social media sites.
  • Total touchscreen support: Excel 2019 isn’t just the best spreadsheet program for your Windows desktop and laptop PC; it’s also the best on your Windows tablet and smartphone. To make sure that the Excel touchscreen experience is as rich and rewarding as with a physical keyboard and mouse, Excel 2019 supports a special Touch mode that puts more space between command buttons on the Ribbon, making them easier to select with your finger or stylus, along with all major touchscreen gestures.
  • Integrated Data Model support: Excel 2019 supports true one-to-one and one-to-many relations between the data tables that you import into Excel from standalone database management programs as well as between the data lists that you create in Excel. The relationships between the data tables and lists in the Data Model then enable you to use data from any of their columns in the Excel pivot tables and charts you create.
  • Pivot table filtering with slicers and timelines: Excel 2019’s slicers make it possible to quickly filter the data in your pivot tables on a multiple of columns via onscreen graphic objects. Timelines enable you to graphically filter pivot table data using a timeline based on any date-type column included in the pivot table’s Data Model.
  • Recommended charts: Not sure what type of chart will show off your data the best? Just position the cell pointer anywhere in the table of data and choose Insert→Recommended Charts on the Ribbon. Excel then displays an Insert Chart dialog box where Live Preview shows how the table’s data will look in a variety of different types of charts. Once you find the chart best represents the data, you simply click the OK button to embed it in the table’s worksheet.
  • Recommended Pivot Tables: If you’re a newbie at creating pivot tables for the Excel data lists you create as well as data tables that you import from standalone database management programs, you can now get Excel to recommend and create one for you. All you have to do is locate the cell cursor in one of the cells of the data list and choose Insert→Tables→Recommended PivotTables on the Ribbon. Excel 2019 then opens the Recommended PivotTables dialog box showing you a whole list of different pivot tables that you can create on a new worksheet in the current Excel workbook simply by selecting the OK button.
  • Office Add-ins: Office Add-ins enable you to expand the power of Excel 2019 by installing all sorts of specialized little programs (also known as apps) that are available from the Office Store right within the program. To install and use an add-in, choose Insert→Add-Ins→My Add-ins→See All on the Ribbon and then select the Store option in the Office Add-ins dialog box.

Free apps for Excel 2019 include the Bing Maps app to plot locations, the Merriam-Webster Dictionary app to look up words, and the Mini Calendar and Date Picker app to help you enter dates in your worksheet.

  • Quick Analysis tool: The Quick Analysis tool appears at the lower-right corner of any selected table in an Excel 2019 worksheet. This tool contains options for applying conditional formats, creating a chart or pivot table, totaling values in rows or columns, or adding sparklines for the data in the selected table. And thanks to Excel’s Live Preview, you can see how your table data would appear using the various options before you apply any of them.
  • Flash Fill: This nifty feature is literally a mind reader when it comes to dealing with multipart cell entries in a single column of the worksheet that contains discrete elements you could better use if they were entered all by themselves in separate columns of the sheet.

To separate discrete elements from longer entries in the column, all you have to do is manually enter the first element in the longer entry you want extracted into a cell in the same row in an empty column to the right terminated by pressing the down arrow. Then, the moment you type the first letter of the corresponding element in the second longer entry in the empty cell in the row below, Excel 2019’s AutoCorrect feature not only suggests the rest of that second entry to make but all the rest of the corresponding entries for the entire column. To complete the AutoCorrect suggested entry and fill out the entire column, you simply click the Enter button on the Formula bar or press the Enter key.

About This Article

This article is from the book:

About the book author:

Greg Harvey began training business people to use computers and software back in the days of DOS. He is the author of numerous For Dummies books, including all editions of Excel All-in-One For Dummies, Excel Workbook For Dummies, and Excel For Dummies . He has worked as an independent trainer and as an instructor at Golden Gate University.

This article can be found in the category: