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96 Data Entry 101
You AutoComplete this for me
Excel automatically makes use of a feature called AutoComplete, which attempts to automate completely textual data entries (that is, entries that don’t mix text and numbers). AutoComplete works this way: If you start a new text entry that begins with the same letter or letters as an entry that you’ve made recently in the same region of the worksheet, Excel completes the new text entry with the characters from the previous text entry that began with those letters.
For example, if you type the spreadsheet title Sales Invoice in cell A1 of a new worksheet and then, after completing the entry by pressing the ↓, start entering the table title Summary in cell A2, as soon as you type S in cell A2, Excel completes the new text entry so that it also states Sales Invoice by adding the letters ales Invoice.
When the AutoComplete feature completes the new text entry, the letters that it adds to the initial letter or letters that you type are automatically selected (indicated by highlighting). This way, if you don’t want to repeat the original text entry in the new cell, you can replace the characters that Excel adds just by typing the next letter in the new (and different) entry. In the previous example, in which Sales Invoice was repeated in the cell where you want to input Summary, the ales Invoice text appended to the S that you type disappears the moment you type u in Summary.
Note that when you have two different entries that begin with the same first letter but have different second letters, typing the second letter of one entry causes Excel to complete the typing of that entry, leaving you free to insert its text in the cell by pressing the Enter key or using any of the other meth- ods for completing a cell entry.
To make use of automatic text completion rather than override it as in the previous example, simply press a key (such as Enter, Tab, or an arrow key), click the Enter button on the Formula bar, or click another cell to complete the completed input in that cell. For example, say you’re building a sales table in which you’re inputting sales for three different account representatives — George, Jean, and Alice. After entering each name manually in the appropriate row of the Account Representative column, you need to type in only their first initial (G to get George, J to get Jean, and A to get Alice) in subsequent cells and then press the ↓ or Enter key to move down to the next row of that column. Of course, in a case like this, AutoComplete is more like automatic typing, and it makes filling in the Account Representative names for this table extremely quick and easy.
 



























































































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