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The cut and paste tool in Excel is a very useful tool to create exact copies of sections.
But first let me explain the problem. Here we've got a product A section -- you'll
see we've set it up. We've got some nice calculations, etc and my temptation will be
to take this, copy it and just to paste it here. As shown in other video clips, the problem
is, depending on how you did the formula, you'll see the dollar signs mean that we
think we wanted the formulas to look within themselves but because of the dollar sign
it is looking at product A. I'm just deleting this. We can make use of cut and paste to
avoid this. First what you need to do is just create a new sheet -- a new spreadsheet.
I'm just going to open a new spreadsheet -- so I've got this blank spreadsheet.
Now this is key -- what I am going to do is I am going to take this section and instead
of copying it, I'm actually going to cut it. I'm going to cut it and put it anywhere
in the blank spreadsheet. So now we've got it sitting there. Come back to the original
spreadsheet -- I've removed it from Product A. The key here is I'm going to now close
down this spreadsheet but very important I'm not going to save it -- no saving. Close
it down. Then immediately just open it up again -- you'll see because we didn't
save it, Product A is still sitting there and go back to the new sheet -- again I will
cut it, come back to the original spreadsheet, put it in the right place and I paste it.
And now what you'll see is that whereas previously this formula looked up here because
it was a copy and paste. Using cut and paste we have now kept the integrity of that whole
block and in a fairly simple way we have safely made an exact copy of this section.