Lesson 3.2 – Relative vs Absolute References When you copy a formula in Excel, the cell references inside it may change automatically. This behavior is extremely powerful, but only if you understand how it works. In this lesson, you will learn the difference between relative , absolute , and mixed references. 1. What Are Cell References? A cell reference tells Excel where to find the data used in a formula. Examples: A1 → column A, row 1 B5 → column B, row 5 C10 → column C, row 10 When you copy a formula, Excel may adjust these references automatically. 2. Relative References (A1) Relative references change when a formula is copied to another cell. This is the default behavior in Excel. Example: =A1 + B1 If you copy this formula from row 1 to row 2, it becomes: =A2 + B2 Excel “moves” the references based on the direction of the copy. 3. Absolute References ($A$1) Absolute references do not change when copi...
Lesson 3.1 – How Formulas Work Formulas are the core of Excel. They allow you to perform calculations, analyze data, and automate tasks. Every formula in Excel follows a simple structure and always begins with an equal sign (=). Understanding how formulas work is essential before learning specific functions. 1. The Structure of a Formula All Excel formulas follow this basic pattern: =operand operator operand Example: =5 + 3 =A1 * B1 =SUM(A1:A10) Excel calculates the result and displays it in the cell, while the formula remains visible in the Formula Bar. 2. The Equal Sign (=) Every formula must start with = . Without it, Excel treats the entry as text. Examples: =10+5 → Excel calculates 10+5 → Excel shows “10+5” as text 3. Operators in Excel Operators tell Excel what type of calculation to perform. Operator Meaning Example + Addition =A1 + B1 - Subtract...