Excel Made Easy is a proud sponsor of Dismantle-It.com the site that shows you the belly of your daily objects, Poupounette.com the site of cars loving cat and PowerPointMadeEasy.com the world top reference for PowerPoint Presentations questions and Pet Cemetery Online a site dedicated to your loving Pets.
By In Excel 2011 for mac, a PivotTable is a special kind of table that summarizes data from a table, data range, or database external to the workbook. If you’re PivotTable aficionado, you will be in seventh heaven with the new PivotTable capabilities in Office 2011 for Mac. Here’s how to make a PivotTable:. (Optional) Select a cell in your data range or table. Choose Data→PivotTable. Alternatively, on the Ribbon’s Tables tab, go to the Tools group and click Summarize with PivotTable.
Choose the data to analyze: Make choices from the following options:. Location: If you performed Step 1, your table or range is already filled in for you. If you didn’t start with a table or range, you can select a data range or table using the mouse. Use an E xternal D ata S ource: Displays the Mac OS X ODBC dialog. Choose where to put the PivotTable:.
New Worksheet: If selected, adds a new sheet to the workbook and places your PivotTable in Cell A1 of the new worksheet. Existing Worksheet: Choose a cell on your worksheet. The cell will be the upper-leftmost corner of your PivotTable. Make sure there’s enough room so your PivotTable doesn’t overlap existing cell ranges. Drag field names from the Field Name section at the top to the panes below. Selecting and deselecting the field names includes or excludes the columns from the pivot table. Clicking the pop-up buttons within the pivot table displays Filter dialogs appropriate for the data type in your pivot table.
You can filter the Field Name list by typing field names in the search box in the Pivot Table Builder dialog. Drag fields from one pane to another to generate new pivot table variations. You can change the column names, calculations, and number formats provided by the PivotTable Builder. There’s a little information button at the right end of each field name in the panels at the bottom of the PivotTable Builder.
Click the information button to display the PivotTable Field dialog. The properties displayed are for the field name of the button you clicked:. Field Name (Optional): Type a new field name. Summarize By: Choose which type of calculation to use. Show Data As: Select how you want to show the data from the pop-up menu.
You can choose from Normal, Difference From,% Of,% Difference From, Running Total In,% of Row,% of Column,% of Total, or Index. Base Field and Base Item: If you choose Difference From in the Show Data As pop-up menu, choose which fields you’re comparing. Delete: Removes this field from the PivotTable report. Number: Displays the Number tab of the Format Cells dialog so you can choose a number format or make a custom number format. When you select a cell in a PivotTable, look at the Ribbon to find the PivotTable tab, which you click to display all sorts of PivotTable tools. The PivotTable tab is for experts. PivotTable Ribbon offers additional formatting options and still more controls for your PivotTable, but it goes beyond the scope of this book.
![Mac Mac](http://www.asap-utilities.com/screenshots/tools/en_us/0262-03-Change-cells-to-MAC-Address-formatting.png)
If you find PivotTables to be useful, then by all means explore the PivotTable Ribbon.
Struck out altogether, no cigar. I didn't get as far J K did if I open Modules, nothing exist, and I have the very, very latest of 16.12. I stayed away from coding stuff like VBA because I am old enough, that I was using Computer before VBA came out and was taught, that languages such as VBA are a good way for Bad people to destroy files and Hard drives and stay away.
I got first steps 1 through 5. After that dead in the water. I'll just leave it alone. Wouldn't use much anyway. UPDATE: I tried one more time get it to work. But I am using the very latest version Of Excel, and I don't know what I did in testing out. I would type the key combination, and it crashed three times.
I found unlike the and entering the key combo twice, PC version video of things you can do. Instead of just typing the search criteria in an adjacent cell you have to highlight the entire column after typing the criteria and enter key combos. Not selecting column the item will not trigger or cause an Excel crash. Disclaimer: The questions, discussions, opinions, replies & answers I create, are solely mine and mine alone and do not reflect upon my position as a Community Moderator.
If my reply has helped, mark accordingly - Helpful or Answer Phillip M. Jones, C.E.T. Flash Fill might require an Office 365 subscription. It would make sense, as it is a new feature not in the original 2016 release. Please go to the Excel menu and choose About Excel and check the license type.
I made and tested the macro while having an Office 365 Subscription. If anyone has two Macs, one with an Office 365 subscription and another with some other sort of license and can compare the results, I can modify the steps to say a subscription is required if that is the case. I am an unpaid volunteer and do not work for Microsoft.
'Independent Advisors' work for contractors hired by Microsoft. 'Microsoft Agents' work for Microsoft Support.