Locked lesson.
About this lesson
Recognize the main terms used to describe Excel’s work canvas.
Lesson versions
Multiple versions of this lesson are available, choose the appropriate version for you:
Exercise files
Download the Excel workbook used in the video tutorial and try the lesson yourself.
The Work Surface.xlsx17 KB
Quick reference
The Work Surface
Recognize the main terms used to describe Excel's work canvas.
When to use
Use to understand the main terms used to describe Excel’s work canvas.
Instructions
Reading the Grid
- Excel’s grid is broken into columns (lettered across the top of the grid) and rows (numbered down the left side of the grid)
- Cells are referred to by the coordinates, always citing the column first, then the row (i.e. A1, B10, D15)
The Name Box
- Located above the upper left of the grid, but below the Ribbon
- This box returns the address (coordinates) of the top left selected cell
- Entering a cell address in this box and pressing Enter will take you there
- If you have named objects in your workbook (like tables), selecting the name from this list will select the object
Worksheet Tabs
- Located in the bottom left corner of the interface
- Allows you to select different worksheets in the workbook
Formula Bar
- Located above the grid, right of the Name box and below the Ribbon
- Shows you the true contents of the top left selected cell (i.e. formulas instead of the value that shows in the grid itself)
- Can be used to edit cell contents
Scroll Bars
- Located on the right edge (vertical) and bottom right corner (horizontal)
- These bars allow you to move the focus of the worksheet to other areas
Zoom Slider
- Located in the bottom right corner of the application
- Allows you to zoom in or out of the worksheet, making it appear larger or smaller
Quick Info Area
- Located in the bottom right corner, to the left of the Zoom Slider
- Takes effect when multiple cells are selected
- Provides quick information like SUMs and AVERAGEs of selected values
- 00:04 This video focuses on the next most important thing to understand about Excel,
- 00:08 which is the work surface, where we actually get our work done.
- 00:12 Excel's a spreadsheet program, and
- 00:13 basically what that means is that everything we do is done in cells.
- 00:18 It looks like a worksheet, almost kind of like graph paper,
- 00:21 if you remember that from school.
- 00:23 So in Excel, everything is divided into rows and columns.
- 00:27 So you'll notice at the top here we have columns labeled A through F on the screen.
- 00:31 But they go way to the right from that.
- 00:34 And down the left-hand side, we see our row numbers.
- 00:36 And if I were to go and click on a cell, let's say this one here,
- 00:40 this would be cell E6.
- 00:41 And this is a key when we actually talk about cells.
- 00:43 We always refer to them using the column number first and the row number second.
- 00:48 So this cell here would be G9.
- 00:52 Up in the top left, beside the formula bar,
- 00:55 you'll see this box here called the name box, and
- 00:57 you'll notice that it actually has the name of the cell right in it.
- 01:01 So there's G9.
- 01:02 If I go and select on cell A9, it says A9 as well.
- 01:07 I can use this box in a couple of different ways.
- 01:09 I can actually click on it.
- 01:10 I could say, let's go to B2, and Enter, and it'll take me directly to that cell.
- 01:16 Or I could actually click the little drop down arrow, and you'll notice that it
- 01:20 actually gives me a hotlink to all of the named objects within an Excel file.
- 01:25 We're gonna talk more about these in later modules in the course.
- 01:29 Right now, you'll notice I have something called Table1.
- 01:31 And if I click on it, it will take me directly to the body area
- 01:34 of that particular table which is pretty handy.
- 01:38 Down at the bottom, you'll see that we have worksheets.
- 01:40 And in this file, we only have one, called the example.
- 01:43 But I can click on little + icon here and
- 01:46 that will allow me to create multiple new worksheets.
- 01:49 I can have as many worksheets as I want in one file.
- 01:52 And if I wanna go back to a previous one, I'll just go and
- 01:55 click it, using my left mouse button, and it'll take me right back there.
- 01:58 So that's pretty easy as well.
- 02:01 Now, one of the things we use a lot in Excel is the formula bar.
- 02:04 I've already mentioned it a couple times, and this is it right here.
- 02:08 You'll notice that when I select the cell like A9,
- 02:11 it actually tells me what's in that cell in the formula bar and it says soccer and
- 02:15 that's because A9 contains soccer.
- 02:18 If I were to move to B9, it would tell me 56, which is what's showing in the cell.
- 02:23 And in C9 it would show $8.99.
- 02:26 The reason this is important is because,
- 02:29 if we select a cell, I could go over here and I could type something in here.
- 02:32 I could type $6.99 and hit Enter.
- 02:35 And at that point,
- 02:36 it will put it into the cell, even though I actually used the formula bar to do it.
- 02:40 When I hit Enter, it automatically moves us down to the next cell.
- 02:44 Now I can also go and click on a cell and type in 595.
- 02:49 And you'll notice that as I'm typing in the cell,
- 02:51 it writes it into the formula bar as well.
- 02:53 So these two things work together, but
- 02:55 the key thing to remember is that if you ever want to know what's really in a cell,
- 02:59 like for example, where we have sports store inventory.
- 03:03 If I click on B5, you'll notice that even though we see stuff inside the cell,
- 03:08 the actual cell itself is blank because the data actually lives in A5.
- 03:12 So that's something to remember.
- 03:15 I'm gonna go and select these guys here, and I'm going to remove them.
- 03:19 But I should probably talk about how I did that.
- 03:21 I just left-clicked and dragged to select a range of cells.
- 03:26 And now, I can press the Delete key in order to clear the data out.
- 03:31 On the right-hand side of the user interface, we also have the scroll bars.
- 03:35 And you'll notice that you can click individual times and move up and
- 03:39 down using the scroll bar.
- 03:40 Or we can also click in the big space between the bar and one of the arrows
- 03:46 to make a big jump, and we can left-click and drag the scroll bar around as well.
- 03:50 So we've got a few different ways to work with that, and the same thing is true for
- 03:54 the left and right actions on the scroll bar down below.
- 03:58 Another piece that we want to look at, this little slider down at the bottom,
- 04:02 this is called the zoom slider.
- 04:04 So if we wanna make things bigger, we can click on the + and
- 04:07 we can actually magnify what we're looking at.
- 04:09 Or on the- to zoom down.
- 04:12 We can left-click and drag the zoom slider as well to make things bigger or smaller,
- 04:16 and if you can get it right back to the center, it'll go back to 100%.
- 04:20 This is a very quick way to go through and
- 04:21 actually scale some things if you need to see them.
- 04:25 Now the next thing I want to do is left-click and
- 04:28 drag down to select all of the items in my cost field.
- 04:31 And you'll notice that down here I have some information that's telling me
- 04:35 the average of the selected cells is 6.884.
- 04:38 And the count is 5, and we've got 34.42 as the sum.
- 04:43 If I go and pick up what's going on in the text,
- 04:45 it tells me the count is 5 five because it can't make an average or a sum of these.
- 04:49 This is a quick information area of your ribbon, and
- 04:53 it allows you to actually go and get some quick stats about what's going on.
- 04:58 And if you ever wanna change it, you can right-click on it and
- 05:00 you have all kinds of different options that you can add around.
- 05:04 So you'll see we've got average count, we can actually have the numerical count
- 05:08 minimum, maximum, or sums, or turn them off as well.
Lesson notes are only available for subscribers.