Excel 2016 All-in-One For Dummies. Harvey Greg
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✔ Enable Live Preview: Disables or reenables the Live Preview feature whereby Excel previews the data in the current cell selection using the font or style you highlight in a drop-down list or gallery before you actually apply the formatting.
✔ ScreenTip Style: Changes the way ScreenTips (that display information about the command buttons you highlight with the mouse) are displayed onscreen. Select Don’t Show Feature Descriptions in ScreenTips from the ScreenTip Style drop-down list to display a minimum amount of description in the ScreenTip and eliminate all links to online help, or select Don’t Show ScreenTips to completely remove the display of ScreenTips from the screen (potentially confusing if you add macros to the toolbar that all use the same icon).
The options in the When Creating New Workbooks section of the Popular tab of the Excel Options dialog box include only these four combo and text boxes:
✔ Use This as the Default Font: Select a new default font to use in all cells of new worksheets by entering the font name in the combo box or selecting its name by clicking it in the drop-down list (Body Font, which is actually Microsoft’s Calibri font).
✔ Font Size: Select a new default size to use in all cells of new worksheets (11 points is the default size) by entering the value in the box, or select this new point value by clicking it in the drop-down list.
✔ Default View for New Sheets: Select either Page Break Preview (displaying page breaks that you can adjust) or Page Layout (displaying page breaks, rulers, and margins) as the default view (rather than Normal) for all new worksheets.
✔ Include This Many Sheets: Increase or decrease the default number of worksheets in each new workbook (1 being the default) by entering a number between 2 and 225, or select this new number by clicking the spinner buttons.
The Personalize Your Copy of Microsoft Office section contains the following three options:
✔ User Name: This text box enables you to change the user name that’s used as the default author for new workbooks created with Excel 2016.
✔ Office Background: This drop-down list enables you to change the faint, background pattern that appears on the right side of the Excel title bar above the Ribbon. By default, the Clouds pattern appears as the background. To change this background pattern, select its name from the Office Background button’s drop-down list. To display no pattern in this area of the title bar, you select the None option from this drop-down list.
✔ Office Theme: This drop-down list enables you to select between three different tint options – Colorful, Light Gray, and White – that are applied to the borders of the Excel screen, creating a kind of background color for the Ribbon tabs, column letter and row number indicators on the worksheet frame, and the status bar.
The final section, Start Up Options, contains the following three options:
✔ Choose the Extensions You Want Excel to Open by Default: The Default Programs button, when clicked, opens a Set Associations for Program dialog box that enables you to select all the types of application files that you want associated with Excel 2016. Once associated with Excel, double-clicking any file carrying its extension automatically launches Excel 2016 for viewing and editing.
✔ Tell Me if Microsoft Excel Isn’t the Default Program for Viewing and Editing Spreadsheets: This check box determines whether or not you’re informed should another Spreadsheet program or viewer on your computer other than Excel 2016 be associated with opening Excel workbook files.
✔ Show the Start Screen When This Application Starts: This check box determines whether or not the Start screen (described in detail in Book I, Chapter 1) appears when you launch Excel 2016.
The options on the Formulas tab (see Figure 2-3) of the Excel Options dialog box (File ⇒ Options ⇒ Formulas or Alt+FTF) are divided into Calculation Options, Working with Formulas, Error Checking, and Error Checking Rules.
Figure 2-3: The Formulas tab’s options enable you to change how formulas in the spreadsheet are recalculated.
The Calculation options enable you to change when formulas in your workbook are recalculated and whether and how a formula that Excel cannot solve on the first try (such as one with a circular reference) is recalculated. Choose from the following items:
✔ Automatic option button (the default) to have Excel recalculate all formulas immediately after you modify any of the values on which their calculation depends.
✔ Automatic Except for Data Tables option button to have Excel automatically recalculate all formulas except for those entered into what-if data tables you create. (See Book VII, Chapter 1.) To update these formulas, you must click the Calculate Now (F9) or the Calculate Sheet (Shift+F9) command button on the Formulas tab of the Ribbon.
✔ Manual option button to switch to total manual recalculation, whereby formulas that need updating are recalculated only when you click the Calculate Now (F9) or the Calculate Sheet (Shift+F9) command button on the Formulas tab of the Ribbon.
✔ Enable Iterative Calculation check box to enable or disable iterative calculations for formulas that Excel finds that it cannot solve on the first try.
✔ Maximum Iterations text box to change the number of times (100 is the default) that Excel recalculates a seemingly insolvable formula when the Enable Iterative Calculation check box contains a check mark by entering a number between 1 and 32767 in the text box or by clicking the spinner buttons.
✔ Maximum Change text box to change the amount by which Excel increments the guess value it applies each time the program recalculates the formula in an attempt to solve it by entering the new increment value in the text box.
The Working with Formulas section contains four check box options that determine a variety of formula-related options:
✔ R1C1 Reference Style check box (unchecked by default) to