• keepcarrot [she/her]
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      11 year ago

      I feel like I had barely encountered spreadsheets before my dad threw me in the deep end with SQL at age 13. I did not learn it well and now have a semester of database design as well, but I’d say I’m about as good at both? idk :( I’m pretty bad at both unless I compare myself to someone without a CS degree.

  • @[email protected]
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    131 year ago

    Maybe you need a career shift bud. As a designer you could absolutely use those softwares!

  • MxM111
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    891 year ago

    Excel is a powerful tool. I was solving system of differential equations with Newton method in it. Sometimes it is easier than in Matlab (or Mathematica) if all you have is good understanding of how step-wise equations should look like, but not the differential equations themselves. Those steps may include if statements, for example.

    • Bloody Harry
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      371 year ago

      Had to do a similar project and it took me three full days of back and forth with another software before I found out EXCEL rounds small numbers in very weird ways.

      Also, in EXCEL functions/formulas and data/values are wildly mixed.

      (Not mentioning a plethora of other mildly infuriating quirks here)

      • Vash63
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        341 year ago

        Smooth scrolling.

        Kind of serious, the lack of smooth scrolling makes Calc really horrible to use on a touchpad or with large/differing sized cells (formatted sheets with headers and such)

      • @[email protected]
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        81 year ago

        Embed objects and query spaces from other Microsoft products, mainly.

        It’s a circular argument that all of the corporate world is too heavily invested in to change.

      • @[email protected]
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        271 year ago

        Almost nothing, considering Calc is a clone. I don’t think people are excluding LibreOffice from the list of smooth brain apps.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        Not lagging horribly with big tables after calculating a simple formula? That’s the only thing i can think of. Everything else is just very similar

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      Call me crazy, but the admittance matrix hw (Gaussian, G-S, Newton, N-R, etc.) I did last semester was much more intuitive for me on MATLAB than on Excel… but I’m gonna get screwed for that because a vast majority of companies would never bother to pay for MATLAB (+ Toolboxes) licenses.

      • MxM111
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        51 year ago

        There is always Octave.
        And I am not claiming that Excel is better than Matlab. There are lots of tasks where Matlab is better, or where it is not even possible to use Excel with any efficiency. And yet, Excel IS a powerful tool for scientists and engineers. Not just for accountants.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        We have a single licence for matlab installed on an old laptop in the lab. I find it easier to program in Excel than try to reserve the laptop and go to the office (sometimes you reserve it and after arriving you find out that the last guy never returned it so you spend extra time trying to find where it is or who has it)

  • stebo
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    41 year ago

    I’m in university and I use both…

  • @[email protected]
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    271 year ago

    TBF if you’re professionally using MATLAB you’re like, sending people to space or modeling atmospheres. Which I guess some of you might do haha.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 year ago

      I’ve used it to simulate things for mechanisms and motors etc for mechanical engineering

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    Garbage software is one of the primary reasons I left my last job despite high pay. It just got too friggin annoying to use. They’d roll out a ‘hotfix’ to fix something they had broken 3 months earlier and they’d break 2 new things which previously had been working fine for years. The support was so bad I just bought a magic eight ball for our office and we’d ask it our support questions.

    Yardi, I’m looking at you.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    Being a SOLIDWORKS customer is exactly the same as being a rat in a cage. They are the most aggressively evil I’ve ever experienced. Adobe etc not even close

    • mayooooo
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      41 year ago

      Yeah I wanted to comment on this too. It’s a win for ms against dassault every time

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        I used Creo for about 5 years at a previous job but I never knew the cost. How does it compare?

        • @[email protected]
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          21 year ago

          Creo has a bit of a steeper learning curve to be sure, and is more expensive.

          But it also is, in my experience, much more robust and has a lot more capability on the advanced side of modeling. Solidworks requires more workarounds in order to accomplish what you’re trying to do, vs Creo with probably a dedicated tool for that specific task.

  • @[email protected]
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    21 year ago

    Man I guess I’m spoiled. We get access to the top row except SolidWorks because we license an alternative. We use the entire MS suite too though but as a supplement. I don’t use excel hardly at all because JMP is superior in every single way, except for dashboards where we use PowerBI.

    • @[email protected]
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      31 year ago

      I want to love Julia so much, but it’s always something. The funky handling of scope in the REPL was the latest off-putting thing for me, but maybe I should give it a try again…

    • @[email protected]
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      31 year ago

      If you don’t like MATLAB your probably not the correct audience. It’s for people needing to do data analysis, simulation or control and have a lot of money to pay for the libraries. The things software developers hate about it tend to be what makes it better for statistics and modelling. Math works even suggest it isn’t appropriate for making software as the sell simulink coder that turns simulink models into c++ code.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        I am 100% the target audience, have worked on multiple teams that did their 6DOF models in Matlab for GNC and orbital dynamics stuff.

        I still think simulink is absolutely terrible. It makes certain things a lot easier to implement but the Git implementation is very nearly useless.

  • @[email protected]
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    1651 year ago

    I can see Word, PowerPoint and Outlook as stupid.

    But Excel is perfect! You can’t say You have mastered it.

    Even if You have written a book about Excel, it transcends You.

      • deweydecibel
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        1 year ago

        I can’t tell if this is ironic or not, because it genuinely feels like Microsoft believes this when you look at the absolute disgrace “New” Outlook is.

        For Microsoft, “Modern, sleek, streamlined” are just marketing terms for “We got lazy, made a less useful wed-based product, and you’ll have to accept it, at the same price, while we save money on development.”

        • @[email protected]
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          31 year ago

          The reduced feature set in the web app is either development hasn’t reached parity, or they want it to be just enough to compete with Google sheets but keep people using the windows app.

          A better price of software would be several different tools. But Microsoft want to keep the features set and backwards compatibility and the users don’t want big changes so the messy mishmash it what results.

          Excel is used as a app builder, a database, plotting tool, table formatting, dashboard, visual basic environment, simulation environment there’s probably many more uses. I think it was supposed to be a calculator and accountancy book combination.

          If anyone knew excel (or spreadsheets in general) would become what they did they would design it completely differently. A database that links to different pieces of software would be much better. That can’t exist now, because the markets consumed by excel.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 year ago

          Outlook really has a lot of obscure features that not many people used. I think it’s good for them to cull these less used features and later re-add them rewritten in a more supportable manner.

          I also really appreciate the emoji-reactions because I don’t have to type out a response expressing that I have read and acknowledge an email, I can just give it a thumbs up and move on, and they don’t receive a whole email to read, they just see that it got a thumbs up and can move on too

        • AggressivelyPassive
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          111 year ago

          Those are different categories of problems.

          Excel really does too much. Biologists literally renamed a genom because Excel kept turning it into a date. If any other database did that, the vendor would hear a friendly but stern “get fucked”.

          • @[email protected]
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            1 year ago

            They’re using a spreadsheet and getting burned when it acts like a spreadsheet. It’s like complaining that a screwdriver did a bad job hammering nails.

            • AggressivelyPassive
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              41 year ago

              Yeah, that’s my point. Excel is almost never the right tool, but since it’s doing so much, it can be used for almost anything, just in a very shitty manner. And in reality, it is used for almost anything.

    • @[email protected]
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      111 year ago

      I thought I knew everything about Excel, but just last week I learned that it now has TypeScript integration for macros. I nearly wept tears of joy. Finally I can leave behind VBA.

    • @[email protected]
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      311 year ago

      Unpopular opinion time: but give me a csv and a python script any day over excel.

      I can’t count the hours I spend cleaning up and debugging xlsx files from customers that were completely unusable due to excels automatic data type feature.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      Excel is, almost certainly, the single most important and influential piece of software in almost every business.

      Excel can do anything, including so many things it shouldn’t.

        • @[email protected]
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          811 year ago

          we have an excel spreadsheet at my workplace that takes a solid 2 minutes to open and even longer to close and accesses a number of other spreadsheets with read/write access in the background. it’s an absolute monster.

          (it’s essentially a database that keeps track of the calibration dates for our testing equipment)

          • deweydecibel
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            1 year ago

            There are numerous reports and databases we work with from other platforms, and for nearly all of them, I just end up feeding it to Excel so I can manage it the way I like. So many of those platforms just have absolute dog shit UIs or refuse to present data in a configurable way, or straight up hide certain things for no reason.

            Part of my Monday morning routine is actually exporting a CSV for a couple things that can’t be connected directly to excel, hitting Get Data, and letting my custom workbooks do their thing. Watching it all update and present itself in exactly the way I want to see it is so god damn satisfying.

            • @[email protected]
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              91 year ago

              there are definitely reasons to use excel but in my case there is a defined and expected workflow and using excel just makes it unnecessarily slow and error-prone. at this point, the worksheet breaks at least once every 3 months and i’m the one who gets to fix it because i read myself into the worksheet’s script and the guy who originally created it doesn’t work for us anymore.

              the code is (thankfully) well enough commented that additional documentation is not necessary to understand it, so reading yourself into it is thankfully easy enough as long as you know VBA.

          • @[email protected]
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            41 year ago

            Depending on what functions you have running to make it do all the things, could you have it live on Sharepoint and just access it through Excel online? That offloads a lot of the processing to MS’s servers but does have the disadvantage of being Excel Online, which has some but not all the functions of desktop Excel and the keyboard shortcuts may or may not work. Also, Excel Online doesn’t seem to love macros, which can break things.

            • @[email protected]
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              41 year ago

              the only reason that the spreadsheet exist is because of macros (pretty sure the table has over 10.000 lines of VBA, with more in the tables it accesses) but my bosses are thankfully investigating alternatives for a migration of the functions that that table provides.
              I sadly am only a trainee at the company, so i don’t get too much input beyond fixing whatever breaks with it every so often while it’s still in use, but yeah.

              • @[email protected]
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                31 year ago

                “Only a trainee…”

                Sounds like you’re the only one keeping that thing running. Don’t sell yourself short!

                • @[email protected]
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                  21 year ago

                  my boss does appreciate what i’m doing but i just don’t have a decision power that someone working in IT would have (i work in the physics/chemistry lab). thanks though, i appreciate the sentiment :)

          • @[email protected]
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            31 year ago

            Until it has an odbc connection to a sql server or access db it’s still low level wizardry.

      • @[email protected]
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        101 year ago

        It’s turning complete, so it’s should be able to do anything. Power point is also turning complete, but not practical. Excel is practical enough to get started then moving on to something better gets hard because people depend on those excel sheets.

    • deweydecibel
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      1 year ago

      As much as I despise Microsoft and 365, Excel is like the one thing I genuinely think they deserve an incredible amount of credit for. It’s one of the most invaluable, well supported tools around.

      Shame you can’t just buy it.

      • @[email protected]
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        151 year ago

        You can. It’s expensive, but perpetual licences for Office still exist. The Home edition is €150, the professional edition costs €580.

        • deweydecibel
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          201 year ago

          I mean Excel specifically, not the whole suite. I don’t need PowerPoint or a word processor, I’d rather it not be included in the price at all.

          Also, they’ve made OneDrive a requirement for auto-saving on 365, not sure if that’s the case for the perpetual licenses, but if so, that’s a deal breaker for me. There will never be a Microsoft account associated with my Windows machine, period.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        Sure I have.

        If you spin it by saying it would improve productivity, they’ll listen and pretend it was their idea all along.

        • AggressivelyPassive
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          21 year ago

          Or (way more likely) they’ll just not listen or find excuses. That’s how large corporations work. Do you really think, you’d be the first one to propose that maybe excel isn’t the best tool for the job?

    • @[email protected]
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      31 year ago

      Mainly corporate momentum.

      The decision to shift out of the microsoft is too costly at this point for even medium sized businesses to consider.