Excel allows you to manage lists of all sorts, to retrieve data and to extract statistics. All without programming and in a few clicks.
You have to manage a file of members of an association, a collection of stamps, DVDs or good bottles? For this you have two options. Either you install a software of database management (DBMS) such as Access. But beware: such a program is not cheap (more than Rs. 13000 for Access 2007), or easy to use. The alternative is to use an Excel spreadsheet as widespread.
The latter, in fact, has many functions that allow you to enter or modify data in a collection, to extract information using a variety of criteria, to obtain data on all or part of the basis . Thus, on the basis of films such as the one we have chosen to illustrate this issue, you will see that in a few clicks, you will easily find things in less than 90 min, while this very intuitively and without learning programming language.
But what should you do to convert an Excel spreadsheet into a database? The answer is simple: nothing! Indeed, any list of data is automatically considered as a basis provided that a few simple rules of common sense that we detail in the following pages.
Leaving on good... bases
After reviewing the techniques to capture, edit and monitor data, we will see how to create simple queries, then using the complex functions of the spreadsheet. We detail the PivotTables, this magical summarizing statistical calculations the more complex a few mouse movements. Finally, we will finish this guide by sharing a database on a remote computer. To illustrate these pages, we will use Excel 2007, which brings several new features compared to the previous version. To track and rebuild our manipulation, no need to be an expert in the use of spreadsheet Microsoft at most should know the basics.
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