Author dave Posted on May 10, 2014 June 24, 2016 Categories Microsoft Office Tricks Tags Excel on Mac, VBA Macro One thought on “Developing Excel Workbooks with Windows/Mac compatible Macros” Donal Botkin says.
In Office 2011 for Mac, Excel’s simple Paste option handles most of your ordinary pasting requirements, but it’s a one-shot deal — you can choose only a single option. On the other hand, the Paste Special feature in Excel 2011 for Mac lets you pick and choose exactly what individual or combination of attributes you want to paste.
- Select the cell or cell range to copy and choose Edit→Copy.
- Click in the cell where you want to paste and then choose Edit→Paste Special.
- In the Paste section of the dialog, select the option that you need.
- Click OK.
The Paste Link button becomes active depending on what you copied and which paste option you chose in the Paste Special dialog. The Paste Link button pastes a cell formula that refers to the cell you’re copying.
Turning rows into columns with Paste Special in Excel 2011 for Mac
Many times, you may wish you could easily change the layout of data from horizontal to vertical, or vice versa. Fortunately, Excel’s Paste Special Transpose option does exactly that.
To change columns into rows quickly, follow these steps:
- Select a cell range and choose Edit→Copy.
- Select a destination cell.
- Choose Edit→Paste Special.
- Select the Transpose check box and then click OK.
Using Paste Special with objects in Excel 2011 for Mac
If you copy an object, rather than a cell or cell range, the Paste Special dialog offers paste options appropriate to the kind of object you are pasting. Charts, tables, and pictures all have unique Paste Special options, each described within the description portion of the Paste Special dialog.
You can use the Paste Special feature in Excel by using content that you copied from another open application, such as Word, PowerPoint, or even a Web browser. Options in the Paste Special dialog change depending on what you’ve copied to the Clipboard.
Copying as a picture in the first place
You can easily copy a picture of an object, a cell, or a cell range, but you have to know about the secret Edit menu. Follow these steps to use the modified Edit menu:
- Select a cell, a range of cells, or an object on a worksheet.
- Hold down the Shift key and click the Edit menu.Here’s the secret! When you hold down the Shift key, the Edit menu offers Copy Picture and Paste Picture options.
- Choose Edit→Copy Picture.
- Click one of the choices:
- As Shown on Screen: What you see is what you get.
- As Shown When Printed: The picture is formatted based on your current selections in Page Setup.
Now, you have a picture on the Clipboard that you can use in Excel or any other application that can paste pictures.You can also hold Shift and choose Edit→Paste Picture to paste the Clipboard contents as a picture, regardless of its origin.
This Excel tutorial explains how to create a pivot table in Excel 2011 for Mac (with screenshots and step-by-step instructions).
See solution in other versions of Excel:
Question: How do I create a pivot table in Microsoft Excel 2011 for Mac?
Answer: In this example, the data for the pivot table resides on Sheet1.
Highlight the cell where you'd like to see the pivot table. In this example, we've selected cell A1 on Sheet2.
Next, select the Data tab from the toolbar at the top of the screen. Click on the PivotTable button and select Create Manual PivotTable from the popup menu.
A Create PivotTable window should appear. Select the range of data for the pivot table and click on the OK button. In this example, we've chosen cells A1 to D13 in Sheet1.
Next, select where you wish to place the PivotTable. In this example, we clicked on the 'Existing worksheet' option and set the location to Sheet2!$A$1.
Click on the OK button.
Your pivot table should now appear as follows:
In the PivotTable Builder window, choose the fields to add to the report. In this example, we've selected the checkboxes next to the Order ID and Quantity fields.
Next under the Values box, click on the 'Sum of Order ID' and drag it to the Row Labels box.
Your pivot table should now display the total quantity for each Order ID as follows:
Finally, we want the title in cell A2 to show as 'Order ID' instead of 'Row Labels'. To do this, select cell A2 and type Order ID.