If you're trying to work out an average, you're trying
to calculate what the most common value is. For example, if a class
of eight students took exams, you may want to know what the average
exam score was. In other words, what result most students can expect
to get. In order to calculate an average, you'd add up all eight exam
scores and divide by how many students took the exam. So if the total
for all eight students was 400, dividing by 8 would get you 50 as the
average grade. If any students were below the average, you can tell
at a glance.
In Excel , there is an easy way to calculate the average of some numbers
- just use the inbuilt Average function.Start a new spreadsheet and enter the following exams scores in cells A1 to A8, as in the image below:
Click in cell A9, and we'll see how to use the Average
function in Excel 2007. There are two ways we can do this. Try method
1 first.
Method 1
Next to the formula bar, you'll see an FX button. This is the Formula Wizard:
When you click the FX button, you'll see the Insert
Function dialogue box appear:
The Insert Function dialogue box shows a list functions.
These are the just the common ones. To see more functions, click the
drop down list to the right of Select a category. The one we want is
displayed under Select a function, though - Average. Click on this,
and then click OK.
When you click OK, another dialogue box appears. On this dialogue box,
you select the data that you want to include in your function:
If you look in the Number1 box, you'll see Excel has guessed
which cells we want to use for our Average function - A1:A8. It evens
gives the answer to the Function - 6.625.
Click OK to insert the function.Method 2
The second way to enter a Function in Excel is through the panels on the Ribbon. Try this:- Click inside cell B9 on your spreadsheet. This is where we'll place the Average for the cells A1 to A8.
- Click the Formulas menu at the top of Excel
- Locate the Function Library panel. Here it is in Excel 2007
And here it is in later versions:
Now click Average from the menu. Because the answer is
going in cell B9, Excel doesn't know which cells you want to use in
the function, so it can't give you a quick answer. AutoSum is good when
the data is in the same row or column. But when it's not, you have to
tell it what to calculate.
So click inside cell A1 and you'll see the cell selected
Hold down your left mouse button over the bottom right
blue square, and drag to cell A8:
Excel fills in the cells for your function. Let go of
the left mouse button, and then press the Enter key on your keyboard.
The correct answer is place in cell B9:
You can also find the Average function on the More Functions
menu. Click Statistical, and you'll see it there:
Of course, once you know the correct function, you could
simply type it all out in the Formula bar yourself!
Try this exercise.Exercise
You start your own online business and find that sales for the first week are these:
Monday £120.45
Tuesday £187.43
Wednesday £106.87
Thursday £143.69
Friday £117.52
Saturday £87.93
Sunday £92.12
Use a function to work out how much you earned, on average, each day.
In the next part, we'll take a look at Date functions
in Excel.




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