Lesson 6.5 – Best Practices for Clean Spreadsheets Clean spreadsheets are easier to read, easier to maintain, and far less likely to contain errors. Whether you are preparing a report, building a dashboard, or sharing data with colleagues, following best practices ensures your work looks professional and functions reliably. In this lesson, you will learn the essential rules for creating clean, organized, and error‑free spreadsheets. 1. Why Clean Spreadsheets Matter A clean spreadsheet: Reduces mistakes and inconsistencies Makes formulas easier to understand Improves collaboration with colleagues Helps you analyze data more effectively Looks professional and trustworthy Clean structure is the foundation of every good Excel file. 2. Use Clear and Consistent Headers Headers should be descriptive, short, and consistent. Avoid vague labels like “Info” or “Data”. Good examples: Product Name Order Date Total Sales Custo...
Chapter 10: Updating and Deleting Maintaining data integrity while modifying existing records is a core responsibility for any database professional. In this chapter, we’ll explore how to: Craft safe UPDATE statements with precise WHERE filters Delete data responsibly using DELETE and TRUNCATE Control transactions with COMMIT, ROLLBACK, and SAVEPOINT Leverage backups and test environments to prevent data loss Mastering these techniques ensures your production workflows are reliable, reversible, and free from unexpected data corruption. 1. Why Safe Data Modification Matters Uncontrolled UPDATEs or DELETEs can irreversibly alter or remove critical business information. Key risks include: Accidentally updating all rows by omitting a WHERE clause Deleting entire tables instead of targeted records Leaving partial changes due to interrupted operations Violating referential integrity and breaking application logic By applying rigorous safeguards—filters, transactions, and testing—you pr...