Integrating Word and Excel Test #1
By fault, an Excel spreadsheet that you create in Word is formatted with the
Default theme
A hyperlink is
a text element or graphic that you click to display another place in a file
You can create hyperlinks to
access data from other documents and programs
The Excel spreadsheet object is
an embedded object in the Word file
You use the Links dialog box to
change link sources and then update links
You can change the color assigned to a followed hyperlink by
clicking the Design tab, then clicking the Colors button and clicking Customize Colors
From here, you can change the colors assigned to text in the theme
currently being used in the document
When an object is embedded, you edit it by
double-clicking it and using the source program tools
You can still view different worksheets in your Excel document while
editing it in the Word document
You often create hyperlinks between two files that you plan to send
electronically
You can change the source of any link that you create between two files,
even when the files are created in different source programs
The first step to insert a hyperlink that will connect a word in Word to an Excel document is to
highlight the word that will be the link between the two
But when you click a hyperlink from a source file to a location in a destination file,
the destination file opens
When you create a file in one program and embed it into another program,
the formatting of the original file is retained
When you embed a Word file in an Excel spreadsheet,
the original Word formatting is retained
The Excel ribbon and tabs replace the Word ones; however,
the title bar shows that you are still working in the Word document and using Excel tools only to modify the embedded Excel file
You can include text in a ScreenTip that appears
when users point to the hyperlink
When you copy, paste, and link data between programs,
you actually bring the data into the destination file
Instead of combining all the information into one file in one program,
you can create two documents, such as a letter or other document in word and a spreadsheet showing calculations in Excel, and insert a hyperlink in one document that opens the other document
When you don't need to store spreadsheet data in a separate Excel file,
you can use the table command to create an Excel spreadsheet in Word and then use Excel tools to enter labels and values and make calculation
To modify it,
you double click it and then use Excel tools that become available inside of the Word program window