• Hule@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    I can see Word, PowerPoint and Outlook as stupid.

    But Excel is perfect! You can’t say You have mastered it.

    Even if You have written a book about Excel, it transcends You.

    • stevehobbes@lemy.lol
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      9 months ago

      Excel is, almost certainly, the single most important and influential piece of software in almost every business.

      Excel can do anything, including so many things it shouldn’t.

        • knorke3@lemm.ee
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          9 months ago

          we have an excel spreadsheet at my workplace that takes a solid 2 minutes to open and even longer to close and accesses a number of other spreadsheets with read/write access in the background. it’s an absolute monster.

          (it’s essentially a database that keeps track of the calibration dates for our testing equipment)

          • deweydecibel@lemmy.world
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            9 months ago

            There are numerous reports and databases we work with from other platforms, and for nearly all of them, I just end up feeding it to Excel so I can manage it the way I like. So many of those platforms just have absolute dog shit UIs or refuse to present data in a configurable way, or straight up hide certain things for no reason.

            Part of my Monday morning routine is actually exporting a CSV for a couple things that can’t be connected directly to excel, hitting Get Data, and letting my custom workbooks do their thing. Watching it all update and present itself in exactly the way I want to see it is so god damn satisfying.

            • knorke3@lemm.ee
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              9 months ago

              there are definitely reasons to use excel but in my case there is a defined and expected workflow and using excel just makes it unnecessarily slow and error-prone. at this point, the worksheet breaks at least once every 3 months and i’m the one who gets to fix it because i read myself into the worksheet’s script and the guy who originally created it doesn’t work for us anymore.

              the code is (thankfully) well enough commented that additional documentation is not necessary to understand it, so reading yourself into it is thankfully easy enough as long as you know VBA.

    • arymandias@feddit.de
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      9 months ago

      Unpopular opinion time: but give me a csv and a python script any day over excel.

      I can’t count the hours I spend cleaning up and debugging xlsx files from customers that were completely unusable due to excels automatic data type feature.

    • BombOmOm@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      I think it’s mostly because they keep trying to push other services down your throat. For example, opening a link in Outlook opens it in Edge, even when your default browser is something else. I can’t use Edge for that link, I’m not signed into stuff there. So now, because of retarded decisions like that, Outlook actually is missing basic features that Hotmail in the 90s had.

        • Tattorack@lemmy.world
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          9 months ago

          The definition of “retardation” is as follows:

          1. The act or process of delaying or impeding.
          2. The condition of being delayed or impeded.
          3. The extent to which something is held back or delayed.

          Considering that the features being complained about impede the user, calling those features “retarded” is an adequate description.

          It is also in-fitting with the definition of lacking of intellectual development; as mentioned, other programs do not feature such impediments, and in the case of Office 365, may actually be a regression of features.

      • cyberfae@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        because of retarded decisions like that

        You know you could have just used shitty instead of using a slur, which would have the same emphasis without the baggage of the other word.

        • crispy_kilt@feddit.de
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          9 months ago

          Shitty has a different meaning. Above commenter meant to say the person making the decision was differently abled with regards to their cognitive capabilities. The other is excrement.

  • Jo Miran@lemmy.ml
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    9 months ago

    I will always appreciate a true Excel power user. I’ve seen some black magic shit.

    • Followupquestion@lemm.ee
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      9 months ago

      Good Excel users think themselves better than a beginner. Great Excel users think themselves somewhere between Intermediate and Advanced. Excel Masters, and I know one who placed in that Excel data modeling competition, know they’re somewhere in the Intermediate to Advanced range.

  • HootinNHollerin@slrpnk.net
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    9 months ago

    Being a SOLIDWORKS customer is exactly the same as being a rat in a cage. They are the most aggressively evil I’ve ever experienced. Adobe etc not even close

        • Atropos@lemmy.world
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          9 months ago

          Creo has a bit of a steeper learning curve to be sure, and is more expensive.

          But it also is, in my experience, much more robust and has a lot more capability on the advanced side of modeling. Solidworks requires more workarounds in order to accomplish what you’re trying to do, vs Creo with probably a dedicated tool for that specific task.

  • CptEnder@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    TBF if you’re professionally using MATLAB you’re like, sending people to space or modeling atmospheres. Which I guess some of you might do haha.

  • MxM111@kbin.social
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    9 months ago

    Excel is a powerful tool. I was solving system of differential equations with Newton method in it. Sometimes it is easier than in Matlab (or Mathematica) if all you have is good understanding of how step-wise equations should look like, but not the differential equations themselves. Those steps may include if statements, for example.

    • Bloody Harry@feddit.de
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      9 months ago

      Had to do a similar project and it took me three full days of back and forth with another software before I found out EXCEL rounds small numbers in very weird ways.

      Also, in EXCEL functions/formulas and data/values are wildly mixed.

      (Not mentioning a plethora of other mildly infuriating quirks here)

    • TheOakTree@beehaw.org
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      9 months ago

      Call me crazy, but the admittance matrix hw (Gaussian, G-S, Newton, N-R, etc.) I did last semester was much more intuitive for me on MATLAB than on Excel… but I’m gonna get screwed for that because a vast majority of companies would never bother to pay for MATLAB (+ Toolboxes) licenses.