how to use marco

  • Thread starter Thread starter rnparikh
  • Start date Start date
can you tell me how to use marco in excel and what is benefits to use
it?
Thanks a lot

I donot know if you can use "Marco".
Why don't you ask him yourself?
;-)))
 
Hi Dodo2U,

You have chosen to mock an inadvertent typo by one whose first tongue is not
English.

Having done so, it is doubly incumbent upon you to avoid such typos
yourself.

Incidentally, how fluent are you in the OP's mother tongue?
 
Thank you, Norman.
*******************
~Anne Troy

www.OfficeArticles.com


Norman Jones said:
Hi Dodo2U,

You have chosen to mock an inadvertent typo by one whose first tongue is not
English.

Having done so, it is doubly incumbent upon you to avoid such typos
yourself.

Incidentally, how fluent are you in the OP's mother tongue?
 
Hi Dodo2U,

You have chosen to mock an inadvertent typo by one whose first tongue
is not English.

Having done so, it is doubly incumbent upon you to avoid such typos
yourself.

Incidentally, how fluent are you in the OP's mother tongue?

And that is?
 
A bit more to the point no matter what you say you can easily
offend someone, especially where jokes are concerned and
not understood in the same context. Especially in a newsgroup
such as this where many people here don't speak English as
their primary language.

A macro is a collection of program code, and functions to accomplish
a task and could be a complete program. Programmer's familiar with
other languages naturally gravitate to using and writing their own macros.
But anyone can use a macro, and anyone who wants to make a change
and changes it themselves has just become a programmer (also called
developers now). As a result of the question I rearranged the beginning
of my web page to better answer the original question
http://www.mvps.org/dmcritchie/excel/getstarted.htm

Marco is man's name as in Marco Polo, an Italian that visited
China via the old silk routes and wrote about it. You can't ask him,
but there are lots of other males around who are named Marco.
 
For someone with a lastname of Parikh, would expect their native
language spoken in the home to be one of the languages of India.


And that is?
 
Hey DeauDeau,

I didn't take your comment to be mockery, but a lighthearted way of pointing
out something. Unfortunately, the narrow bandwidth of a printed post can
easily cause misinterpretation.

So many people have used the term "marco" over the years, I've begun to
wonder if that's actually the word, in some languages, for macro. It seems
to be becoming one. Or maybe it's just like "seperate," "cant,"
"formating," and others. Dunno. Nucular.

Since we're off topic, our local PBS station has started running 'Allo 'Allo
again. It's been years. :)
 
Hey DeauDeau,

I didn't take your comment to be mockery, but a lighthearted way of
pointing out something. Unfortunately, the narrow bandwidth of a
printed post can easily cause misinterpretation.

Thank you!

As I'm just a Dutch national myself, my mothertongue is not English either.
But I try and do my best to use proper English which is almost impossible
as we are flooded with the/an American-English version everywhere. That I
find quite acceptable, though.

I was not "mocking" (it was not my goal) as you did understand. But from
the other responses I started to feel like being a person with criminal
intentions.

I have hesitated to give that response as I did but could not suppress it.
Had something to do with the original sender's address in which the part
"rnparikh.1sypma". "Sypma" is a typical Frisian (Fryslan is a provence in
The Netherlands) name and (mis)led me to assume it was a (expatriate?)
Dutchman who asked the question.

I'm sorry to have caused this commotion! I'll try to suppress my urges
better the next time I feel an itch.
 
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