Regular Crashing in Excel - Possible cause referencing entire column
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I've been using Excel from Office 365 for the last 2 years on Windows 10 and get crashes almost daily. I need to have several workbooks open at any one time but don't see why this should be an issue as it wasn't when I was previously using an older version of Excel.
I've just come across a link on the official MS Office website here and was shocked to see the following;
The following things can cause performance or crashing issues:
Formulas referencing entire columns.
I'm referencing entire columns all the time using several functions such as sumifs
, average
, etc. eg: =average(A:A)
and surely I can't be the only one.
Is this likely to be the cause and does anyone know of a workaround?
microsoft-excel
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up vote
0
down vote
favorite
I've been using Excel from Office 365 for the last 2 years on Windows 10 and get crashes almost daily. I need to have several workbooks open at any one time but don't see why this should be an issue as it wasn't when I was previously using an older version of Excel.
I've just come across a link on the official MS Office website here and was shocked to see the following;
The following things can cause performance or crashing issues:
Formulas referencing entire columns.
I'm referencing entire columns all the time using several functions such as sumifs
, average
, etc. eg: =average(A:A)
and surely I can't be the only one.
Is this likely to be the cause and does anyone know of a workaround?
microsoft-excel
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
favorite
up vote
0
down vote
favorite
I've been using Excel from Office 365 for the last 2 years on Windows 10 and get crashes almost daily. I need to have several workbooks open at any one time but don't see why this should be an issue as it wasn't when I was previously using an older version of Excel.
I've just come across a link on the official MS Office website here and was shocked to see the following;
The following things can cause performance or crashing issues:
Formulas referencing entire columns.
I'm referencing entire columns all the time using several functions such as sumifs
, average
, etc. eg: =average(A:A)
and surely I can't be the only one.
Is this likely to be the cause and does anyone know of a workaround?
microsoft-excel
I've been using Excel from Office 365 for the last 2 years on Windows 10 and get crashes almost daily. I need to have several workbooks open at any one time but don't see why this should be an issue as it wasn't when I was previously using an older version of Excel.
I've just come across a link on the official MS Office website here and was shocked to see the following;
The following things can cause performance or crashing issues:
Formulas referencing entire columns.
I'm referencing entire columns all the time using several functions such as sumifs
, average
, etc. eg: =average(A:A)
and surely I can't be the only one.
Is this likely to be the cause and does anyone know of a workaround?
microsoft-excel
microsoft-excel
asked Dec 7 at 7:15
TomC
995
995
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The usual way to reference data in a column is to specify the first and last cell, like =average(A2:A99)
.
That has some disadvantages, like adding at the bottom is not automatically included in the range, but that's just a matter of getting used to insert before the last line instead.
Using A:A instead is a short-cut that kind-of-works, but if you use the full version, you can avoid your issues.
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1 Answer
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
0
down vote
The usual way to reference data in a column is to specify the first and last cell, like =average(A2:A99)
.
That has some disadvantages, like adding at the bottom is not automatically included in the range, but that's just a matter of getting used to insert before the last line instead.
Using A:A instead is a short-cut that kind-of-works, but if you use the full version, you can avoid your issues.
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
The usual way to reference data in a column is to specify the first and last cell, like =average(A2:A99)
.
That has some disadvantages, like adding at the bottom is not automatically included in the range, but that's just a matter of getting used to insert before the last line instead.
Using A:A instead is a short-cut that kind-of-works, but if you use the full version, you can avoid your issues.
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
The usual way to reference data in a column is to specify the first and last cell, like =average(A2:A99)
.
That has some disadvantages, like adding at the bottom is not automatically included in the range, but that's just a matter of getting used to insert before the last line instead.
Using A:A instead is a short-cut that kind-of-works, but if you use the full version, you can avoid your issues.
The usual way to reference data in a column is to specify the first and last cell, like =average(A2:A99)
.
That has some disadvantages, like adding at the bottom is not automatically included in the range, but that's just a matter of getting used to insert before the last line instead.
Using A:A instead is a short-cut that kind-of-works, but if you use the full version, you can avoid your issues.
answered Dec 7 at 22:15
Aganju
8,41231335
8,41231335
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