Citations:Excel


 * 2003, Sarjinder Singh, Advanced Sampling Theory with Applications, How Michael 'selected' Amy, ISBN 1402017065, volume 1, illustrated, page xxvii:
 * Note that I used EXCEL to solve the numerical examples, and while using a hand calculator there may be some discrepancies in the results after one or two decimal places.
 * 2007, Jonathan Byrom, Armed Forces Guide to Personal Financial Planning, Strategies for Securing Your Finances at Home While Serving Our Nation Abroad, Armed Forces Guide to Personal Financial Planning Series, Stackpole Books, ISBN 0811733106, illustrated, page 76
 * You can easily perform a precise calculation by using Excel or an online loan payment calculator
 * 2007 March, James Murphey (interviewee), Timothy Gunatilaka, “In My Room”, SPIN, SPIN Media, ISSN 0886-3032, volume 23, number 3, page 42:
 * “I’m a numbers nerd. When Excel came out, I was like, What is up! In the beginning years of DFA [Records, his label with Tim Goldsworthy], we were bold enough to take chances because I could write a budget.”
 * 2007, Bruce Crauder, Benny Evans, and Alan Noell, Functions and Change, A Modeling Approach to College Algebra and Trigonometry, Cengage Learning, ISBN 0618858040, page xviii
 * Many exercises throughout the text include tables of data, making knowledge of Excel a big advantage. The Excel Made Easy supplement provides students with this valuable skill.
 * 2009, Amir Sadr, Interest Rate Swaps and Their Derivatives, A Practitioner's Guide, Wiley Finance series, John Wiley and Sons, ISBN 0470443944, volume 510, illustrated, page ix:
 * For bonds and repos, a typical analyst can use a Bloomberg terminal or the financial toolkit in Excel, or even an HP-12 calculator to get up and running.