Spreadsheet Basics

Download as odt, pdf, or txt
Download as odt, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 6

Spreadsheet Basics

Table of Contents
The Word Spreadsheet..........................................................................................................1
Spreadsheets Today..............................................................................................................1
Open A Spreadsheet..............................................................................................................2
The Calc Toolbars..................................................................................................................2
Main Menu Toolbar............................................................................................................2
Function Toolbar................................................................................................................2
Formatting Toolbar............................................................................................................2
Formula Toolbar.................................................................................................................3
The Spreadsheet Itself...........................................................................................................3
Cells...................................................................................................................................3
Enter Data......................................................................................................................4
Delete Data....................................................................................................................4
Format Data.......................................................................................................................5
Separate Thousands, Two Decimal Places, Red Negtive Numbers .........................5
Align Left........................................................................................................................6
Tutorial donated by Wayne Tachirhard
This tutorial explains some of the basics that allows all Users to be successful with
spreadsheets.

The Word Spreadsheet


The term spreadsheet was derived from a large piece of paper that accountants used for
business finances. The accountant would spread information like costs, payments, taxes,
income, etc out on a single, big, oversized sheet of paper to get a complete financial
overview.

Spreadsheets Today
Some examples of spreadsheet usage:

Spreadsheets act like a calculator by automatically doing calculations.

Spreadsheets are used for tracking personal investments, budgeting, invoices,


inventory tracking, statistical analysis, numerical modeling, address books,
telephone books, printing labels, etc.

Spreadsheets are used in almost every profession to calculate, graph, analyze and
store information.

Spreadsheets are used for What-if calculations. Change one number in a


spreadsheet and all the calculations in a large spreadsheet will re-calculate, will
automatically change.

Spreadsheet_Basics

Last Modified by on 2008-06-04

Page 1 of 6

Open A Spreadsheet
1. IF on the desktop, click
OpenOffice.org Calc.

> All Programs > OpenOffice.org 2.3 >

2. IF you are in a OpenOffice program, click File > New > Spreadsheet.
3. In either case a spreadsheet called
screen.

appears on our

The Calc Toolbars


The following four Calc Toolbars appear at the top of all Calc screens

Main Menu Toolbar

The first toolbar is the Main Menu toolbar that gives you access to many of the basic
commands used in Calc.

Function Toolbar

The second toolbar down is the Function Toolbar. The Function Toolbar contains icons
(pictures) to provide quick access to commands like New, Open, Print, Copy, Paste, etc.
When you place your mouse cursor over any of the elements of a toolbar, the name of the
element appears on your screen.
Move your cursor over the icon
opens a new spreadsheet.)

. (The word New appears. Clicking on

Formatting Toolbar

The third toolbar down is the Formatting Toolbar. The Formatting Toolbar has icons
plus drop-down menus that allow you to select a font, font color, alignments, number
formats, border options and background colors.

Formula Toolbar

The fourth toolbar down is the Formula Toolbar. The Formula Toolbar contains the
Name Box drop-down menu and a long white box called the Input Line.
Note: If your Toolbars look different, it is because these toolbars are in 800x600 screen
resolution and the last eight icons are not shown but are available by clicking on the on
the far right of the toolbar.
Spreadsheet_Basics

Last Modified by on 2008-06-04

Page 2 of 6

The Spreadsheet Itself

The rest of the window contains the spreadsheet. The spreadsheet is divided into rows
that have a number at the left of each row and divided into columns with letters at the top
of each column.

Cells
A cell is the fundamental element of a worksheet. This is where things are added and
where things are seen. A cell address in a spreadsheet identifies the location of the cell
in the spreadsheet. A cell address is a combination of the column letter and the row
number of a cell, such as A2 or B16.etc. When identifying a cell by its address, the
column letter is always listed first followed by the row number. The cell address of the
example below is A5.

Spreadsheet_Basics

Last Modified by on 2008-06-04

Page 3 of 6

Enter Data
1. Click on the A1 cell (The cell at the very top left of the spreadsheet).
2. Notice the heavy black border around the A1 cell. The heavy black border indicates
that A1 is the active cell. (A is at the top of the first column and 1 is on the first
row. Both are highlighted. The highlighting also indicates that A1 is the active
cell.)

3. Type Hello World and press Enter.


4. The active cell is now A2. (The words Hello World are in A1.)

5. When you type something in a cell and press Enter, what you typed is seen in that
cell and the cell below becomes the next active cell.

Delete Data
1. Click on A1 again.
2. Press the Delete key. (The Delete Contents window appears.)

3. Check the Delete all box then click OK. (Hello World is deleted from A1)

Spreadsheet_Basics

Last Modified by on 2008-06-04

Page 4 of 6

Format Data
Separate Thousands, Two Decimal Places, Red Negative
Numbers
1. Click cell A1. > Type the number -9999.129 > Press Enter. (The cursor
moves to cell A2)
2. Right-click cell A1. (A small menu appears) > click Format cells. (The Format
cells window appears)

3. Click Numbers tab. Under Category, click on Number. Under Format, click on
-1,234.12. Click In the small box before Negative numbers red. (A check-mark
appears in the box) > Click OK. (The number '-9,999.13 appears in cell A1.

Align Left
1. Click Alignment tab. In the Horizontal pull-down menu, select Left. Click OK.
(the numbers move to the left edge of the cell.)

Spreadsheet_Basics

Last Modified by on 2008-06-04

Page 5 of 6

Notes
Tutorials are improved by input from users. We welcome your constructive criticism.
E-mail suggestions and comments to: [email protected]
For other free tutorials go to: http://www.tutorialsforopenoffice.org

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License

Spreadsheet_Basics

Last Modified by on 2008-06-04

Page 6 of 6

You might also like