Microsoft Office Excel 2003 for Windows (Visual QuickStart Guide)
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| Microsoft Office Excel 2003 for Windows (Visual QuickStart Guide) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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You may not notice it immediately—since the newly revised Excel doesn't look much different than its predecessor—but the addition of XML support means there's a whole lot that's new under the hood of the world's most popular spreadsheet program. To tap its power quickly, you need this Visual QuickStart Guide. In these pages, veteran author Maria Langer provides step-by-step instructions for the full gamut of Excel tasks: from worksheet basics like editing, using functions, formatting cells, and adding graphics objects, to more advanced topics like creating charts, working with databases, and Web publishing. She also explains how to save an Excel document in XML and open an XML document in Excel. As with all Visual QuickStart Guides, clear, concise instructions and lots of visual aids make learning easy and painless.
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| 04-29-08 | 2 | 2\2 |
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I have been diligently working my way through this book, but it's been tough going. This book has 15 chapters and Maria did at least cover all the basics of Excel. Alas, that's all the good news.
This book does not have any exercises. You just get generic descriptions of - If you wanted to make a graph, you would click on these buttons and access these features. That's the biggest thing, the writing style is so general and vague. The writing is not hands on or specific. And the style isn't lively; it doesn't pull you in so you want to keep reading. At least the Dummies books I've read have some humor in them and the writing is usually engaging. On the other hand, at least the writing style avoids the convoluted techno-babble I read in an Access book written by a group of people from Microsoft. (Robert Heinlein wrote, "A committee is the only form of life with 28 legs and no brain.") The book doesn't offer you any data to work with, aside from what you see in the screen captures. So I'm left to make up my own examples, which is extra challenging the first time through using a function or whatever it is. There are lots of screen captures of spreadsheets, but the text doesn't describe what's happening specifically with the spreadsheets. The text is too general, so it's not helpful in a major way. It doesn't rank up there with books that are full of Excel boot camp exercises. Those are my private thoughts. Oddly, she hasn't mastered the future or past tense. From page 171: I explain how to set the scale for an axis later in this chapter. I define the three axes on the previous page. She doesn't know how to say `will explain' or `defined,' ever. The book is rife with these notes and they're always in the present tense. Not a huge deal, but one would think an author and an editor would know how to use the future and past tense. Out of all the Excel 2003 books I've looked at, the one I like the best is Excel 2003 Personal Trainer. It has exercises that I can do along with the book, well done! And it even has a disk full of sample spreadsheets to experiment upon. And the writing is chatty and alive! When working through chapter after chapter, that is especially welcome. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-11-19 06:47:28 EST)
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| 04-29-08 | 2 | (NA) |
| Reviewer | Permalink | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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I have been diligently working my way through this book, but it's been tough going. This book has 15 chapters and Maria did at least cover all the basics of Excel. Alas, that's all the good news.
The best computer book I ever read was Dreamweaver MX, Hands-on-Training. That book has exercises. The authors walk the readers through building a website about bonsai trees and the whole book is superb! That method of doing exercises along with the authors is the best I've ever seen for learning computer anything. This book does not have any exercises. You just get bland descriptions of - If you wanted to make a graph, this is what you would do. That's the biggest thing, the writing style is so bland. The style isn't lively; it doesn't pull you in so you want to keep reading. At least the Dummies books I've read have some humor in them and the writing is usually engaging. On the other hand, at least the writing style avoids the convoluted techno-babble I read in an Access book written by a group of people from Microsoft. (Robert Heinlein wrote, "A committee is the only form of life with 28 legs and no brain.") The book doesn't offer you any data to work with, aside from what you see in the screen captures. So I'm left to make up my own examples, which is extra challenging the first time through using a function or whatever it is. There are lots of screen captures of spreadsheets, but they're all in shades of gray. There aren't any splashes of color to liven up the page. Oddly, she hasn't mastered the future or past tense. From page 171: I explain how to set the scale for an axis later in this chapter. I define the three axes on the previous page. She doesn't know how to say `will explain' or `defined,' ever. The book is rife with these notes and they're always in the present tense. Not a huge deal, but you'd think an author and an editor would know how to use the future and past tense. Out of all the Excel 2003 books I've looked at, the one I like the best is Microsoft Office Specialist: Excel 2003 Study Guide by Linda Johnson. The writing style is more friendly and chatty and she gives exercises in short paragraphs. It's not as cool as walking you through the exercises in Dreamweaver MX, Hands-on-Training, but for Excel 2003, it's the best book I've found. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-05-19 06:41:34 EST)
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| 01-29-08 | 4 | (NA) |
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I have always felt like the Visual Quickstart Guides were the best user guides on the market. This one doesn't disappoint. While the early chapters were for computer users with remedial skills, the book progresses slowly and clearly. It's easy to find what you want. The instructions and illustrations are simple to follow, clear, and well integrated. I've been using it for a couple of years, adding more and more skills to my repetoire as I've needed them, and this guide has never let me down.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-04-30 06:32:02 EST)
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