by admin

2016 Excel Shortcuts Cheat Sheet

2016 Excel Shortcuts Cheat Sheet Average ratng: 8,7/10 967 reviews
Previous Page 2

Jun 28, 2017 - Keyboard shortcuts in Excel 2016 help you to quickly perform. Move to the previous cell in a worksheet or the previous option in a dialog box. Raabta song download old. Shortcuts for Office 2016, 2013 & 2010 Quick Reference Laminated quick reference guide specializing in keyboard shortcuts for Microsoft Office 2016, 2013 and 2010 products Word, Excel, and PowerPoint.

Four new features to check out

Excel 2016 Shortcuts Cheat Sheet Pdf

Spreadsheet pros will be pleased with four new features built into Excel 2016 and 2019 — Quick Analysis, Forecast Sheet, Get & Transform and 3D Maps.

Quick Analysis

Excel

If you’re looking to analyze data in a spreadsheet, the new Quick Analysis tool will help. Highlight the cells you want to analyze, then move your cursor to the lower right-hand corner of what you’ve highlighted. A small icon of a spreadsheet with a lightning bolt on it appears. Click it and you’ll get a variety of tools for performing instant analysis of your data. For example, you can use the tool to highlight the cells with a value greater than a specific number, get the numerical average for the selected cells, or create a chart on the fly.

Forecast Sheet

Also new is that you can generate forecasts built on historical data, using the Forecast Sheet function. If, for example, you have a worksheet showing past book sales by date, Forecast Sheet can predict future sales based on past ones.

To use the feature, you must be working in a worksheet that has time-based historical data. Put your cursor in one of the data cells, go to the Data tab on the Ribbon and select Forecast Sheet from the Forecast group toward the right. On the screen that appears, you can select various options such as whether to create a line or bar chart and what date the forecast should end. Click the Create button, and a new worksheet will appear showing your historical and predicted data and the forecast chart. (Your original worksheet will be unchanged.)

Get & Transform

Cheat

This feature is not entirely new to Excel. Formerly known as Power Query, it was made available as a free add-in to Excel 2013 and worked only with the PowerPivot features in Excel Professional Plus. Microsoft’s Power BI business intelligence software offers similar functionality.

Now called Get & Transform, it’s a business intelligence tool that lets you pull in, combine and shape data from wide variety of local and cloud sources. These include Excel workbooks, CSV files, SQL Server and other databases, Azure, Active Directory and many others. You can also use data from public sources including Wikipedia.

You’ll find the Get & Transform tools together in a group on the Data tab in the Ribbon. For more about using these tools, see Microsoft’s “Getting Started with Get & Transform in Excel.”

3D Maps

Before Excel 2016, Power Map was a popular free 3D geospatial visualization add-in for Excel. Now it’s free, built into Excel 2016 and 2019, and has been renamed 3D Maps. With it, you can plot geographic and other information on a 3D globe or map. You’ll need to first have data suitable for mapping, and then prepare that data for 3D Maps.

Those steps are beyond the scope of this article, but here’s advice from Microsoft about how to get and prepare data for 3D Maps. Once you have properly prepared data, open the spreadsheet and select Insert > 3D Map > Open 3D Maps. Then click Enable from the box that appears. That turns on the 3D Maps feature. For details on how to work with your data and customize your map, head to the Microsoft tutorial “Get started with 3D Maps.”

If you don’t have data for mapping but just want to see firsthand what a 3D map is like, you can download sample data created by Microsoft. The screenshot shown here is from Microsoft’s Dallas Utilities Seasonal Electricity Consumption Simulation demo. When you’ve downloaded the workbook, open it up, select Insert > 3D Map > Open 3D Maps and click the map to launch it.

New features in Excel 2019

Excel 2019 has a few new features you’ll want to check out, notably two new chart types. Here’s what you should know.

Funnel charts

Funnel charts are useful when you want to display values at multiple stages in a process. A funnel chart can show the number of sales prospects at every stage of a sales process, for example, with prospects at the top for the first stage, qualified prospects underneath it for the second stage, and so on, until you get to the final stage, closed sales. Generally, the values in funnel charts decrease with each stage, so the bars in the chart look like a funnel.

When creating the data for a funnel chart, use one column for the stages in the process you’re charting, and a second column for the values for each stage. Once you’ve done that, to create the chart, select the data, then select Insert > Recommended Charts > All Charts > Funnel.

Map charts

Excel

Map charts do exactly what you think they should: They let you compare data across different geographical regions, such as countries, regions, states, counties or postal codes. Excel will automatically recognize the regions and create a map that visualizes the data.

To create a map chart, select the data you want to chart, then select Insert > Maps, then select the map chart. Note that in some instances, Excel might have a problem creating the map — for example, if there are multiple locations with the same name as one that you’re mapping. If that occurs, you’ll have to add one or more columns with details about the locations. If, say, you’re charting towns in the United Kingdom, you would have to include columns for the county and country each town is located in.

New functions

Excel 2019 adds six new functions for doing calculations. TEXTJOIN and CONCAT let you combine text strings from ranges of cells with or without using a delimiter separating each item, such as a comma. You only need to refer to the range and specify a delimiter, and Excel takes it from there. Two other functions, IFS and SWITCH, help specify a series of conditions — for example, when using nested IF functions. And two other new functions, MAXIFS and MINIFS, make it easier to filter and calculate data in a number of different ways.

Functions can be complex to use, and explaining how is beyond the scope of this article. For details about how to use the new functions, head to Microsoft’s helpful “6 new Excel functions that simplify your formula editing experience” post.

Handy keyboard shortcuts

If you’re a fan of keyboard shortcuts, good news: Excel supports plenty of them. The table below highlights the most useful ones, and more are listed on Microsoft’s Office site.

And if you really want to go whole-hog with keyboard shortcuts, download our Excel 2016 and 2019 Ribbon quick reference guide, which explores the most useful commands on each Ribbon tab and provides keyboard shortcuts for each.

Useful Excel 2016 and 2019 keyboard shortcuts

Source: Microsoft
KEY COMBINATIONACTION
Worksheet navigation
PgUp / PgDnMove one screen up / down
Alt-PgUp / Alt-PgDnMove one screen to the left / right
Ctrl-PgUp / Ctrl-PgDnMove one worksheet tab to the left / right
Up / Down arrow keyMove one cell up / down
TabMove to the next cell to the right
Shift-TabMove to the cell to the left
HomeMove to the beginning of a row
Ctrl-HomeMove to the beginning of a worksheet
Ctrl-EndMove to the last cell that has content in it
Ctrl-Left arrowMove to the word to the left while in a cell
Ctrl-Right arrowMove to the word to the right while in a cell
Ctrl-G or F5Display the Go To dialog box
F6Switch between the worksheet, the Ribbon, the task pane and Zoom controls
Ctrl-F6If more than one worksheet is open, switch to the next one
Ribbon navigation
AltDisplay Ribbon shortcuts
Alt-FGo to the File tab
Alt-HGo to the Home tab
Alt-NGo to the Insert tab
Alt-PGo to the Page Layout tab
Alt-MGo to the Formulas tab
Alt-AGo to the Data tab
Alt-RGo to the Review tab
Alt-WGo to the View tab
Alt-QPut cursor in the Tell Me box
Alt-JCGo to the Chart Tools / Design tab when cursor is on a chart
Alt-JAGo to the Chart Tools / Format tab when cursor is on a chart
Alt-JTGo to the Table Tools / Design tab when cursor is on a table
Alt-JPGo to the Picture Tools / Format tab when cursor is on an image
Alt-JIGo to the Draw tab (if available)
Alt-BGo to the Power Pivot tab (if available)
Working with data
Shift-SpacebarSelect a row
Ctrl-SpacebarSelect a column
Ctrl-A or Ctrl-Shift-SpacebarSelect an entire worksheet
Shift-Arrow keyExtend selection by a single cell
Shift-PgDn / Shift-PgUpExtend selection down one screen / up one screen
Shift-HomeExtend selection to the beginning of a row
Ctrl-Shift-HomeExtend selection to the beginning of the worksheet
Ctrl-CCopy cell's contents to the clipboard
Ctrl-XCopy and delete cell's contents
Ctrl-VPaste from the clipboard into a cell
Ctrl-Alt-VDisplay the Paste Special dialog box
EnterFinish entering data in a cell and move to the next cell down
Shift-EnterFinish entering data in a cell and move to the next cell up
EscCancel your entry in a cell
Ctrl-;Insert the current date
Ctrl-Shift-;Insert the current time
Ctrl-T or Ctrl-LDisplay the Create Table dialog box
Ctrl-EndWhen in the formula bar, move the cursor to the end of the text
Ctrl-Shift-EndIn the formula bar, select all text from the cursor to the end.
Alt-F8Create, run, edit or delete a macro
Formatting cells and data
Ctrl-1Display the Format Cells dialog box
Alt-'Display the Style dialog box
Ctrl-Shift-&Apply a border to a cell or selection
Ctrl-Shift-_Remove a border from a cell or selection
Ctrl-Shift-$Apply the Currency format with two decimal places
Ctrl-Shift-~Apply the Number format
Ctrl-Shift-%Apply the Percentage format with no decimal places
Ctrl-Shift-#Apply the Date format using day, month and year
Ctrl-Shift-@Apply the Time format using the 12-hour clock
Ctrl-KInsert a hyperlink
Ctrl-QDisplay Quick Analysis options for selected cells that contain data
Working with formulas
=Begin a formula
Alt-=Insert an AutoSum function
Shift-F3Insert a function
Ctrl-`Toggle between displaying formulas and cell values
Ctrl-'Copy and paste the formula from the cell above into the current one
F9Calculate all worksheets in all workbooks that are open
Shift-F9Calculate the current worksheet
Ctrl-Shift-UExpand or collapse the formula bar
Other useful shortcuts
Ctrl-NCreate a new workbook
Ctrl-OOpen a workbook
Ctrl-SSave a workbook
Ctrl-WClose a workbook
Ctrl-PPrint a workbook
Ctrl-FDisplay the Find and Replace dialog box
Ctrl-ZUndo the last action
Ctrl-YRedo the last action
Shift-F2Insert or edit a cell comment
Ctrl-Shift-OSelect all cells that contain comments
Ctrl-9Hide selected rows
Ctrl-Shift-(Unhide hidden rows in a selection
Ctrl-0Hide selected columns
Ctrl-Shift-)Unhide hidden columns in a selection
F7Spell check the active worksheet or selected range

Ready to delve deeper into Excel? See our “11 Excel tips for power users.”

This story was originally published in May 2016 and updated in Feb. 2019 to include Excel 2019 features.