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Early in its life Excel became the target of a copyright lawsuit by another company already selling a software package named "Excel." As the result of the dispute Microsoft was required to refer to the program as "Microsoft Excel" in all of its formal press releases and legal documents. However, over time this practice has slipped. | Early in its life Excel became the target of a copyright lawsuit by another company already selling a software package named "Excel." As the result of the dispute Microsoft was required to refer to the program as "Microsoft Excel" in all of its formal press releases and legal documents. However, over time this practice has slipped. | ||
Excel has extensive graphing capabilities, added support for ] as a scripting language in 1993 (which |
Excel has extensive graphing capabilities, added support for ] as a scripting language in 1993 (which made it extremely flexible for custom applications), and offers a large number of ] tweaks, but its essence is little different from the original spreadsheet, ]. | ||
Many versions have an ]. | Many versions have an ]. |
Revision as of 08:40, 15 March 2004
Microsoft Excel is a spreadsheet program written and distributed by Microsoft for computers using the Microsoft Windows operating system and Apple Macintosh computers. It is overwhelmingly the dominant spreadsheet application available for these platforms and has been so since version 5 (1993) and its bundling as part of Microsoft Office. It was originally developed for the Mac in 1985 and the first Windows version (1987) was therefore version 2.0. The current version is 11, also called Microsoft Office Excel 2003.
When first bundled into Microsoft Office in 1993, Microsoft Word and Microsoft PowerPoint had their GUIs redesigned for consistency with Excel, still the killer app on the PC at the time.
Early in its life Excel became the target of a copyright lawsuit by another company already selling a software package named "Excel." As the result of the dispute Microsoft was required to refer to the program as "Microsoft Excel" in all of its formal press releases and legal documents. However, over time this practice has slipped.
Excel has extensive graphing capabilities, added support for Visual Basic for Applications as a scripting language in 1993 (which made it extremely flexible for custom applications), and offers a large number of user interface tweaks, but its essence is little different from the original spreadsheet, VisiCalc.
Many versions have an easter egg.
Versions
- Excel
- Excel 2.0 (1987)
- Excel 3.0
- Excel 4.0
- Excel 5.0 (1993)
- Excel 6.0
- Excel 7.0
- Excel 8.0
- Excel 97
- Excel 2000
- Excel 2002
- Excel 2003