application, tool (Or rarely "worksheet") A type of
data in rows and columns of cells. The value in a cell can be
calculated from a formula which can involve other cells. A
value is recalculated automatically whenever a value on which
it depends changes. Different cells may be displayed with
different formats.
Some spreadsheet support three-dimensional matrices and cyclic
references which lead to iterative calculation.
An essential feature of a spreadsheet is the copy function
copied to another which is a multiple of its size. References
between cells may be either absolute or relative in either
their horizontal or vertical index. All copies of an absolute
reference will refer to the same row, column or cell whereas a
relative reference refers to a cell with a given offset from
the current cell.
Many spreadsheets have a "What-if" feature. The user gives
desired end conditions and assigns several input cells to be
automatically varied. An area of the spreadsheet is assigned
to show the result of various combinations of input values.
enables third-party writing of worksheet applications for
commercial purposes.
called
Visi-Calc was introduced. It was probably the first
Lotus maintained its position with world-wide marketing and
support - and lawyers! For example, Borland was forced to
While still developing 1-2-3, Lotus introduced
Symphony,
which had simultaneously active windows for the spreadsheet,
launched its
Excel spreadsheet with interactive graphics,
from other Windows applications. To compete with Windows
spreadsheets, Lotus launched its
Allways add-on for 1-2-3 -
a post-processor that produced Windows-quality graphic
characters on screen and printer. The release of Lotus 1-2-3
for Windows was late, slow and buggy.
Today, Microsoft, Lotus, Borland and many other companies offer
Windows-based spreadsheet programs.
The main end-users of spreadsheets are business and science.
Spreadsheets are an example of a non-algorithmic programming
language.
[Dates?]
(1995-03-28)