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A formula like
(+ A1 A2 A3)
is the sum of three specific cells. If you insert a new second row, the formula becomes
(+ A1 A3 A4)
and the new row is not included in the sum.
The macro (ses-range from to) evaluates to a list of
the values in a rectangle of cells. If your formula is
(apply '+ (ses-range A1 A3))
and you insert a new second row, it becomes
(apply '+ (ses-range A1 A4))
and the new row is included in the sum.
While entering or editing a formula in the minibuffer, you can select a range in the spreadsheet (using mouse or keyboard), then paste a representation of that range into your formula. Suppose you select A1-C1:
Inserts "A1 B1 C1" (ses-insert-range-click)
Keyboard version (ses-insert-range).
Inserts "(ses-range A1 C1)" (ses-insert-ses-range-click).
Keyboard version (ses-insert-ses-range).
If you delete the from or to cell for a range, the nearest still-existing cell is used instead. If you delete the entire range, the formula relocator will delete the ses-range from the formula.
If you insert a new row just beyond the end of a one-column range, or a new column just beyond a one-row range, the new cell is included in the range. New cells inserted just before a range are not included.
Flags can be added to ses-range immediately after the to
cell.
!Empty cells in range can be removed by adding the ! flag. An
empty cell is a cell the value of which is one of symbols nil
or *skip*. For instance (ses-range A1 A4 !) will do the
same as (list A1 A3) when cells A2 and A4 are
empty.
_Empty cell values are replaced by the argument following flag
_, or 0 when flag _ is last in argument list. For
instance (ses-range A1 A4 _ "empty") will do the same as
(list A1 "empty" A3 "empty") when cells A2 and A4
are empty. Similarly, (ses-range A1 A4 _ ) will do the same as
(list A1 0 A3 0).
>vWhen order matters, list cells by reading cells row-wise from top left to bottom right. This flag is provided for completeness only as it is the default reading order.
<vList cells by reading cells row-wise from top right to bottom left.
v>List cells by reading cells column-wise from top left to bottom right.
v<List cells by reading cells column-wise from top right to bottom left.
vA short hand for v>.
^A short hand for ^>.
>A short hand for >v.
<A short hand for >^.
*Instead of listing cells, it makes a Calc vector or matrix of it (see GNU Emacs Calc Manual). If the range contains only one row or one column a vector is made, otherwise a matrix is made.
*2Same as * except that a matrix is always made even when there
is only one row or column in the range.
*1Same as * except that a vector is always made even when there
is only one row or column in the range, that is to say the
corresponding matrix is flattened.
Next: Sorting by column, Previous: The print area, Up: Advanced Features [Contents][Index]