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Exploring Microsoft Excel's Hidden Treasures

You're reading from   Exploring Microsoft Excel's Hidden Treasures Turbocharge your Excel proficiency with expert tips, automation techniques, and overlooked features

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803243948
Length 444 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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David Ringstrom David Ringstrom
Author Profile Icon David Ringstrom
David Ringstrom
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Improving Accessibility
2. Chapter 1: Implementing Accessibility FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Disaster Recovery and File-Related Prompts 4. Chapter 3: Quick Access Toolbar Treasures 5. Chapter 4: Conditional Formatting 6. Part 2:Spreadsheet Interactivity and Automation
7. Chapter 5: Data Validation and Form Controls 8. Chapter 6: What-If Analysis 9. Chapter 7: Automating Tasks with the Table Feature 10. Chapter 8: Custom Views 11. Chapter 9: Excel Quirks and Nuances 12. Part 3: Data Analysis
13. Chapter 10: Lookup and Dynamic Array Functions 14. Chapter 11: Names, LET, and LAMBDA 15. Chapter 12: Power Query 16. Index 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

Troubleshooting Tables

Tables should always expand to incorporate new data that you add immediately to the right or below the Table. However, as you’ll see, it’s relatively easy to accidentally turn off the Include new rows and columns in Table option. Turning this setting back on requires a bit of persistence. You can inadvertently turn off the Fill formulas in Tables to create calculated columns option in a similar fashion. Even when both options are enabled, another scenario can cause Tables and Calculated Columns to not work as expected.

The Include new rows and columns in Table option

First, let’s purposefully prevent a single Table from expanding to incorporate a new row of data:

  1. Activate the Formula References worksheet and then type a number in the next available row of the Item column, such as 11 in cell L14.
  2. Click on the AutoCorrect Options button, and then choose Undo Table AutoExpansion, as shown in Figure 7.32:
...
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