How many times have I heard it before? How do you work with formulas in Numbers? How do I insert a chart and image? I want it to add up all the items for me day by day and show the average values at the same time. Similar questions are likely on the minds of anyone trying to master Numbers spreadsheet, Apple's alternative to Excel, on a Mac. So how do you solve all the pitfalls and traps of Numbers?
One option is help, but I'm sure you'll agree that it's not exactly convenient, and I'm not even talking about searching for specific problems. Fortunately, a new book has now been published Numbers in nice Czech. This is the responsibility of Michal Čihař, who prepared a complete Czech guide to the world of Numbers. This is a completely unique publication on the Czech market, so anyone who wants to learn how to work with Numbers should not miss it.
Numbers in nice Czech describes in detail working with the Numbers spreadsheet calculator, which is part of the iWork office suite for Mac. It is available completely free of charge for newer computers and therefore most users already have it installed. However, learning to use such a complex tool is not entirely easy, and you will certainly come across situations where you need help or an explanation of how a given operation is performed.
Numbers in nice Czech it is clearly divided into twelve chapters and on less than two hundred pages you can find everything essential and important. After reading the book, you will be able to easily master the basic tasks and functions in Numbers, such as working with cells, navigating the graphical interface, formatting cells, working with text, up to more complex tasks such as working with formulas and functions.
The book is intended for the latest version of Numbers, which was published in 2013, so if you have older Numbers '09 on your Mac, you won't be able to use the book, because Numbers, like other applications from the iWork suite, has undergone a complete reconstruction.
Na Numbers in nice Czech I especially appreciate the comprehensibility and appropriately chosen language. The author very well and aptly describes the various functions and options in the individual chapters, which can be easily understood by everyone. The book also contains lots of pictures, tips, advice, keyboard shortcuts and explanations of how the option works in Numbers and how it works in Excel. The author expects that a large target group will be people who are switching from Excel.
Numbers in nice Czech is not only about the latest Numbers, but also works with the current operating system OS X Yosemite. For example, there are also tips for sharing via iCloud Drive. The book is thus an ideal helper and guide to the world of Numbers. In them, it often depends not only on the functions used, but also on the resulting visual appearance of the document - with all of this up to you Numbers in nice Czech they will help.
book Numbers in nice Czech by Michal Čihara you can buy for 325 crowns. Before buying you can look at examples from the book and some described functions can be seen in it ....
So, according to the samples, a massacre: texts without proofreading, zero typography (confused quotation marks, hyphens, scary spaces between words)... Free maybe, but for money? This is what books looked like in 91, not 2015!
I wonder where the desire to have everything for free comes from. Do you also give your work publicly for free? Regarding the book, you say that it may be full of valuable information that would be useful to you, but the editing is terrible, so you want it for free? :-) I'm going to take a look at what you call a massacre that can be done for free... Maybe thanks to stupid editing, it only costs what it costs, and with tip top editing it would cost twice as much... In the end, the market will decide whether the price will go down or if it will sell well; -) Personally, I would bet on the fact that there are not many Mac users in our country, so even with tip top editing, the sales would not be staggering. A lot of people know English, so they don't even need the book. I have no idea and I don't care. I just get turned off by the need to want things for free if I don't fit the bill. What should refrain from commenting and just not buy it?
Do you pay the same for rotten vegetables as for fresh ones? In our vegetables, they give it at a discount, the worst pieces for free. If you are surprised by something about this, you are probably from another planet - after all, this is how it works in all fields: 100% quality = 100% price, defects = discount, there is nothing immoral about it, the opposite is immoral.
I like these arguments. If so, stick to what you wrote. You want crushed (definitely not rotten) peppers for free, not just at a discount. I ask again, do you give your work, including the material, to the public for free? And it still applies that you don't have to buy it. But it's hard to get it back just because of bad editing :-) Have fun.
It takes reading the post properly, thinking, and then you don't have to face it. :)) ("Free maybe") Nobody wants anything for free, only the expected standard for money. So into the shade and it will be better.
:-) classic... There is no answer and when there is nowhere to go, we throw insults at each other.
But come on, I won't get caught up in this, I don't feel like it. And I don't know who started the discussion by twisting the statement. All has been said.
Unfortunately I have to agree.
The book may be full of valuable information, but the editing affects how I will absorb the information as a reader and how I will work with the book (e-book) in general, and I am sure that this will not work well and I sure I wouldn't learn much from it because I wouldn't enjoy reading it.
I would probably pass over the missing proofreading (even if it is the author's business card), but subsequent editing such as line spacing, spaces between words, lines ending with conjunctions, etc.. Simply.. Asking 300 CZK for this is really a lot.