The only thing you can do with the Apple Pencil is draw freehand on top of your spreadsheets. Maybe there are more people out there who need this more than we think, but adding a remedial drawing interface over what should be a powerful productivity tool feels like the wrong move. For many people, Excel is a place where data gets processed before being passed off to its final destination. One example would be downloading a large data set in a CSV, importing it into Excel, and running some analytics on that data.
Maybe you want to make some changes and save that as a new CSV, even. Excel can open most of the file types you would expect, although you should know that it uses an online file conversion tool to convert things like CSVs to Excel documents.
This may be fine by you, but could be an issue if it is a very large file that takes a long time to upload and then re-download from this conversion service. The killer here is the lack of CSV support. The bottom line is that you should only really expect to get. You can switch to another tab or a whole other document in Excel and paste it without a problem. Pasting into Drafts and a note in OmniFocus pasted the data in tab-separated text, which is good. However, most apps accept the data as an image.
Pasting into Apple Notes and other note-taking apps gives you an image of a spreadsheet. On a better note, Excel works pretty well with the Files app for iOS.
If you have a file saved to iCloud or Dropbox, you can open it in Excel on the iPad, do whatever you want with it, and then save the changes directly to where the file came from. If you already have an email with an Excel file attached in your email box, skip this step. Touch your iPad's Home button to return to the list of applications, and then touch the "Mail" app to open your inbox.
Touch the icon for the attached Excel file. It will open up in the iPad's Quick Look file viewer where you can open its various pages, copy information from it, open it in another application or print it to an iPrint printer. This specific file suffix is used for Microsoft Excel , , , and files. Similar suffixes were introduced for Word, Powerpoint and Visio files.
I believe that the easiest way to access xlsx spreadsheets for editing and viewing from your computer is via the Microsoft Office Online suite. In your case just go ahead and register a Microsoft Onedrive account, then save the xlsx workbooks to OneDrive and open those using Microsoft Office online. This neat software package will allow you to open and edit your new Excel file.
Follow a similar process for opening.
0コメント