Lesson 3.3 – Math Functions (SUM, AVERAGE, MIN, MAX) Excel includes built‑in functions that make calculations faster, easier, and more accurate. In this lesson, you will learn four essential math functions used worldwide in business, finance, and data analysis: SUM , AVERAGE , MIN , and MAX . 1. What Is a Function? A function is a predefined formula that performs a specific calculation. All functions follow this structure: =FUNCTION_NAME(arguments) Example: =SUM(A1:A10) Functions save time and reduce errors compared to writing formulas manually. 2. SUM – Add Values SUM adds numbers in a range of cells. Syntax: =SUM(range) Example: =SUM(B2:B10) SUM is ideal for totals, budgets, sales, and any numeric aggregation. 3. AVERAGE – Calculate the Mean AVERAGE calculates the arithmetic mean of a group of numbers. Syntax: =AVERAGE(range) Example: =AVERAGE(C2:C10) Use AVERAGE to analyze performance, scores, or trends. ...
Part II: Retrieving Data Chapter 5: Aggregation and Grouping Summarizing data is essential when you need high-level insights from large tables. Aggregate functions let you collapse detailed rows into single metrics—like totals, averages, or counts. Grouping then partitions those rows into buckets for segmented analysis. In this chapter, we’ll explore: Core aggregate functions: COUNT , SUM , AVG , MIN , MAX Using GROUP BY to create logical buckets Filtering groups with HAVING Handling NULL values within aggregations Practical examples for generating charts and reports 1. Aggregation Functions Overview Aggregate functions process multiple rows to produce a single summary value. They ignore row-level granularity and calculate metrics across a set: COUNT(expr) returns the number of non- NULL values or * for all rows SUM(expr) adds numeric values across rows AVG(expr) computes the average of numeric values MIN(expr) finds the smallest value MAX(expr) finds the largest value E...