Excel used to be able to figure out that when you had a formula for a caluculation and you filled down that you wanted to reference the cell at the very top and the cell to the imediate side. Then you could go sideways as weill and fill out a table. It does’t seem to work like that anymore and it seems I have to tell it what to do, which a real pain in the butt. I looked at several threads but it seems everyone is using the clunky f4 key or VBA to do it. I don’t want to do that, so am I missing some way to turn on the old way to do it automatically? i can’t find such a swithc anywhere and the Help is useless. It seems that MS apps are always trying to do something for you but in this case they seem to have taken away a very valuable feature! Anyway, I’d appreciate being clued in if the feature is there and I am missing it.
![]() |
Patch reliability is unclear. Unless you have an immediate, pressing need to install a specific patch, don't do it. |
SIGN IN | Not a member? | REGISTER | PLUS MEMBERSHIP |
-
No more automatic reference formatting? (excel 2002)
Home » Forums » AskWoody support » Productivity software by function » MS Excel and spreadsheet help » No more automatic reference formatting? (excel 2002)
- This topic has 14 replies, 5 voices, and was last updated 19 years, 9 months ago.
Viewing 0 reply threadsAuthorReplies-
WSRudi
AskWoody LoungerJune 14, 2005 at 5:18 am #953480Unless you use DATA | TABLES (or macro’s), there is no other automatic way of creating tables that reference “variables” on the top and side of the table. Are you aware of data tables? To use it, specify a formula in a cell, and then specify any variables across the same row and column of the formula. Then go the Data | Table and specify a cell that can represent the row variables, and a cell that can represent the column variables, (these are known as Input Cells). Choose OK, and the table is created automatically… without you having to use F4 to determine the absolute/relative references!
-
WStmorken
AskWoody LoungerJune 14, 2005 at 3:30 pm #953548Is Microsoft really so stupid they would make it HARDER than it used to be? Come on, this used to be EASY to do. I used to make tables like this in four easy steps: series fill one row across, series fill one column down. Input formula in top left cell and then fill down, formula fill across. Voila, a nice table. Now I have to go through either a complicated F4 rigamarole, or the complicated data table to do something that used to be EASY. An to boot I have to custom fill EACH COLUMN?!?!?! That is completley nuts!!! Please folks, tell me that I’m missing something here, Even MS in it’s infinite mediocrity, wouldn’t get rid of something THAT easy!!
-
WSHansV
AskWoody Lounger -
WStmorken
AskWoody LoungerJune 14, 2005 at 3:45 pm #953560I am simply trying to fill a table off a multiplication formula. One row of numbers across the top. one row down the side. Put a simple formula multiplying the top row against the column. Very common use of excel. I used to do this all the time and Excel automatically changed the references to accomodate the change in position of the formula. Now it keeps it all relative and so the values are all off. I don’t want to use the F4 option because is very a very clunky way to do it for multiple columns and rows. The data table is also a clunky way to do it. I’m just asking if there is some setting somewhere that will turn on the old automatic referencing that used to make Excel so easy to use. By the way, ranting against MS is the national sport!
-
WSHansV
AskWoody Lounger -
WSsdckapr
AskWoody Lounger -
H. Legare Coleman
AskWoody Plus
-
-
-
-
WSsdckapr
AskWoody LoungerJune 14, 2005 at 3:48 pm #953561It sounds like you just have to use relative and absolute cell referencing in your formulas.
To reference and lock a row add a dollar sign before the row reference. If you want to lock on a column add a dollar sign before the column. To lock on both, add dollar signs before both. No dollar signs and it is completely relative.
If you are selecting cells while creating a formula, will toggle thru the 4 types of formulas.
If you give a specific question we could explain in more detail.
Steve
-
WStmorken
AskWoody LoungerJune 14, 2005 at 4:36 pm #953573OK. I attached the exact example I am working on, but here is an even simpler example: One cell at top with a number in it. The one column to the left and down one row, a column of numbers, say 10 rows worth. Put in a formula in the first intersecting cell. Fill down. Excel used to figure out that you wanted to multiply the top number by each of the column numbers and so Excell AUTOMATICALLY adjusted the relative/absolute references to make that happen. I never had to change the relative/absolute references when doing this and I have done this hundreds of times. Now, I have not used Excel much in the last few years, so I was a bit perplexed when I had to do this very exercise this week and it wouldn’t work. Instead it keeps the relative value all the way through and so multiplies the immediate above cell against the immediate left cell, so becomes exponential. Now, I could use the F4 route, but is it far more trouble than the old automatic way of doing it. So, I want to to do it without the F4 nonsense. Like I said, this used to be a very simple operation.
BTW< cycling the F4 key on the when the entire formula is selected will not bring up the correct relative/absolute reference combintation to fill in the table. Only by cycling on each half of the formula can you make it show correctly. Typing it is faster. But having Excel do it for you is even faster. If excel has really dropped this feature I would consider that a major defect of the application.
-
H. Legare Coleman
AskWoody PlusJune 14, 2005 at 4:41 pm #953575Your formula is doing exactly what you are telling it to do. You have both the column and row references in both cell references entered as relative. Therefore, if you copy that formula, both the column and the row are going to be relative references and it will not do what you want. If you change the formula to:
=$B1*A$2
then it will do what you want. This is the way Excel has worked since I first used version 1.
-
WStmorken
AskWoody LoungerJune 14, 2005 at 4:48 pm #953580Yes, you’re right, the example I sent does not have the correct formula for the entire table to fill in correctly. I know how to type in the correct formula to get what I want, but that is far slower than the old way Excel used to work when it would automatically figure out what you wanted to do. I guess they took that feature out (I admit that sometimes I curse MS apps for trying to do something for me that I don’t want to do, so maybe this was a case of people complaining about that feature). So I guess the autofill feature is gone and Excel is less user freindly than it used to be. Thanks for nothing Bill!
-
H. Legare Coleman
AskWoody PlusJune 14, 2005 at 4:51 pm #953583As far as I know, Excel has NEVER worked the way you describe, and it would be incorrect if it did. If it did work the way you describe, then there would be no way to get the result you are getting. If I wanted the result you are getting, then there would be no way for me to enter a formula that would produce that result, and two ways to enter a formula to get the result that you want.
-
WStmorken
AskWoody Lounger -
H. Legare Coleman
AskWoody Plus
-
-
-
Viewing 0 reply threads -

Plus Membership
Donations from Plus members keep this site going. You can identify the people who support AskWoody by the Plus badge on their avatars.
AskWoody Plus members not only get access to all of the contents of this site -- including Susan Bradley's frequently updated Patch Watch listing -- they also receive weekly AskWoody Plus Newsletters (formerly Windows Secrets Newsletter) and AskWoody Plus Alerts, emails when there are important breaking developments.
Get Plus!
Welcome to our unique respite from the madness.
It's easy to post questions about Windows 11, Windows 10, Win8.1, Win7, Surface, Office, or browse through our Forums. Post anonymously or register for greater privileges. Keep it civil, please: Decorous Lounge rules strictly enforced. Questions? Contact Customer Support.
Search Newsletters
Search Forums
View the Forum
Search for Topics
Recent Topics
-
MS-DEFCON 2: Seven months and counting
by
Susan Bradley
36 minutes ago -
My 3 monitors go black & then the Taskbar is moved to center monitor
by
saturn2233
10 hours, 7 minutes ago -
Apple backports fixes
by
Susan Bradley
38 minutes ago -
Win 11 24H2 will not install
by
Michael1950
10 hours, 21 minutes ago -
Advice to convert MBR to GPT and install Windows 11 Pro on unsupported PC
by
Andy M
9 hours, 52 minutes ago -
Photos from iPhone to Win 10 duplicating/reformatting to .mov
by
J9438
11 hours, 59 minutes ago -
Thunderbird in trouble. Here comes Thundermail
by
Alex5723
10 hours, 9 minutes ago -
Get back ” Open With” in context menus
by
CWBillow
23 hours, 1 minute ago -
Many AMD Ryzen 9800X3D on ASRock have died
by
Alex5723
1 day, 2 hours ago -
simple general stupid question
by
WSaltamirano
20 hours, 48 minutes ago -
April 2025 Office non-Security updates
by
PKCano
1 day, 13 hours ago -
Microsoft wants to hear from you
by
Will Fastie
13 hours, 55 minutes ago -
Windows 11 Insider Preview Build 22635.5160 (23H2) released to BETA
by
joep517
1 day, 17 hours ago -
Europe Seeks Alternatives to U.S. Cloud Providers
by
Alex5723
1 day, 22 hours ago -
Test post
by
Susan Bradley
2 days, 1 hour ago -
Used Systems to delete Temp files Gone WRONG what does this mean?
by
Deo
2 days, 2 hours ago -
SSD shuts down on its own
by
CWBillow
1 day, 18 hours ago -
OneDrive File Sharing Changes
by
David Clark
2 days, 10 hours ago -
OneDrive File Sharing Changes
by
David Clark
2 days, 12 hours ago -
Win 10 Pro 22H2 to Win 11 Pro 23H2 Conversion Guide
by
doneager
1 day, 12 hours ago -
Today is world backup day
by
Alex5723
2 days, 4 hours ago -
Windows .exe on Mint
by
Slowpoke47
9 hours, 34 minutes ago -
Reviewing your licensing options
by
Susan Bradley
10 hours, 29 minutes ago -
Apple has been analyzing your photos since September 2024
by
B. Livingston
1 day, 9 hours ago -
What Windows 11 24H2 offers beyond bugs
by
Lance Whitney
1 day, 5 hours ago -
Making sense of Settings in Windows 11
by
Simon Bisson
1 day, 6 hours ago -
Windows 11 pro fails to log in after upgrading Win 10 pro to Win 11 pro 24h2
by
ben_sitaud
2 days, 10 hours ago -
23H2 / 24H2 / Local v. Microsoft Account.
by
CWBillow
2 days, 8 hours ago -
YouTube Ad Blocker Blocker
by
bbearren
2 days, 8 hours ago -
Obscure historical facts about Windows
by
Cybertooth
2 days, 10 hours ago
Recent blog posts
- MS-DEFCON 2: Seven months and counting
- Apple backports fixes
- April 2025 Office non-Security updates
- Microsoft wants to hear from you
- Reviewing your licensing options
- Apple has been analyzing your photos since September 2024
- What Windows 11 24H2 offers beyond bugs
- Making sense of Settings in Windows 11
Key Links
Want to Advertise in the free newsletter? How about a gift subscription in honor of a birthday? Send an email to sb@askwoody.com to ask how.
Mastodon profile for DefConPatch
Mastodon profile for AskWoody
Home • About • FAQ • Posts & Privacy • Forums • My Account
Register • Free Newsletter • Plus Membership • Gift Certificates • MS-DEFCON Alerts
Copyright ©2004-2025 by AskWoody Tech LLC. All Rights Reserved.