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The Homework Help Thread


Guest Kimmy

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Posted

An integer is the numbers 1 to infinity, their negatives and the number 0.

But they must be whole numbers, numbers with decimal points are not integers.

No idea what that has to do with Excel though, so I'm stumped too! I've never heard of integers in relation to Excel, but then again, I haven't done that much with Excel. Use integers all the time in programming though!

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Posted

I guess Integer form means taking out the decimals and putting them into the nearest whole number.

That is the one thing I don't think will be on the exam but it's good to know.

Posted

Also with excel (okay, so I won't have an exam, but it irritated me last night), y'know when you have a column of numbers (which are actually just formulas showing the answer). Is there a way you can change them into just the numbers, so you can copy and paste them and not get all sorts of formula errorness? Last night I ended up typing 40 6 digit numbers out again, *yawn*.

Posted

Also with excel (okay, so I won't have an exam, but it irritated me last night), y'know when you have a column of numbers (which are actually just formulas showing the answer). Is there a way you can change them into just the numbers, so you can copy and paste them and not get all sorts of formula errorness? Last night I ended up typing 40 6 digit numbers out again, *yawn*.

I don't know for sure if this will work but I think it will and anyway it's worth a shot....

1. Highlight the values that you want to copy

2. Right click as if you're gonna paste it, but click 'Paste Special' instead of 'Paste'

3. A grey dialogue box should appear. Select 'Value'.

This should just paste the value instead of the formula. I think it should work. Hope that helps

XxX

Posted

1. When you write in a formula, it automatically changes it to the answer. I need to know how to change it so the sum comes up. Example: =(A1*B1).

Highlight the area where you want the formula/e to appear (or if you just want the whole thing then don't bother highlighting anything). Click on 'Tools' - 'Options' - Check the 'Formulas' box

That will then give you the formula used, if you want to change it back to just the value, then just go back and uncheck the 'Formulas' box in the 'Tools' - 'Options' menu.

Hope that helps and good luck with your exam....let us know how it goes

XxX

Posted

I have an un-official list of Roger Browns 1973 Child Language Acquisition rules, which show the order things are acquired:

-ing

plural -s

possessive -'s

'the' 'a'

past tense -ed

third person singular verb ending -s

auxiliary 'be'

Does anyone know whether or not this is definately the order?

Thanks for any help xxx

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