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  1. Create a named range from selected cells in an Excel worksheet

    You can quickly create a named range using the currently selected range in your Excel worksheet.

  2. Define and use names in formulas - Microsoft Support

    You can define a name for a cell range, function, constant, or table. Once you adopt the practice of using names in your workbook, you can easily update, audit, and manage these names.

  3. Use the Name Manager in Excel - Microsoft Support

    Use the Name Manager dialog box to work with all the defined names and table names in a workbook. For example, you may want to find names with errors, confirm the value and …

  4. Using structured references with Excel tables - Microsoft Support

    Structured references make it easier to use formulas with Excel tables by replacing cell references, such as C2:C7, with predefined names for the items in a table.

  5. Names in formulas - Microsoft Support

    A name is a meaningful shorthand that makes it easier to understand the purpose of a cell reference, constant, formula, or table, each of which may be difficult to understand at first …

  6. Create a reference to the same cell range on multiple worksheets

    A reference that refers to the same cell or range on multiple sheets is called a 3-D reference. Use a 3-D reference to consolidate data in different worksheets.

  7. Use names in formulas - Microsoft Support

    Learn how to create formulas that use descriptive names to represent cells, ranges of cells, formulas, or constant values.

  8. UNIQUE function - Microsoft Support

    This example uses the ampersand (&) to concatenate last name and first name into a full name. Note that the formula references the entire range of names in A2:A12 and B2:B12.

  9. Filter by using advanced criteria - Microsoft Support

    If you use a column label in the formula instead of a relative cell reference or a range name, Excel displays an error value such as #NAME? or #VALUE! in the cell that contains the criterion. …

  10. Create a histogram - Microsoft Support

    To create a histogram in Excel, you provide two types of data — the data that you want to analyze, and the bin numbers that represent the intervals by which you want to measure the …