
Multiply and divide numbers in Excel - Microsoft Support
Create a simple formula to multiply and divide in an Excel spreadsheet. You can multiply two or more numbers in one cell or multiply and divide numbers using cell references.
Multiply a column of numbers by the same number
The trick to multiplying a column of numbers by one number is adding $ symbols to that number's cell address in the formula before copying the formula. In our example table below, we want to …
Multiply by a percentage in Excel - Microsoft Support
Learn how to multiply an entire column of numbers by a percentage and to reduce or increase an amount by a percentage.
PRODUCT function - Microsoft Support
The PRODUCT function is useful when you need to multiply many cells together. For example, the formula =PRODUCT (A1:A3, C1:C3) is equivalent to =A1 * A2 * A3 * C1 * C2 * C3.
SUMPRODUCT function - Microsoft Support
How to use the SUMPRODUCT function in Excel, one of Excel’s math and trig functions, using multiplication, addition, subtraction, and/or division to return the sum of the products of …
Create a simple formula - Microsoft Support
Create a simple formula in a cell to add, subtract, multiply, or divide numbers by using +, -, *, and /.
Use Excel as your calculator - Microsoft Support
Instead of using a calculator, use Microsoft Excel to do the math! You can enter simple formulas to add, divide, multiply, and subtract two or more numeric values. Or use the AutoSum feature …
How to correct a #VALUE! error - Microsoft Support
The #VALUE! error is also shown when a formula references one or more cells that have text instead of numbers, and uses the standard math operators (+, -, *, and /) to add, subtract, …
MMULT function - Microsoft Support
Excel inserts curly brackets at the beginning and end of the formula for you. For more information on array formulas, see Guidelines and examples of array formulas.
Create a simple formula in Excel - Microsoft Support
You can create a simple formula to add, subtract, multiply or divide values in your worksheet. Simple formulas always start with an equal sign (=), followed by constants that are numeric …