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Using Built-in Add-In Programs in Excel 2010

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2016-03-26 21:15:17
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Microsoft 365 Excel For Dummies
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Add-in programs are small modules that extend the power of Excel 2010 by giving you access to a wide array of features and calculating functions not otherwise offered in the application. There are three different types of add-ins:

  • Built-in add-ins available when you install Excel 2010.

  • Add-ins that you can download for Excel 2010 from Microsoft Office Online.

  • Add-ins developed by third-party vendors for Excel 2010 that often must be purchased.

When you first install Excel 2010, the built-in add-in programs included with Excel 2010 are not loaded and therefore are not yet ready to use. To load any or all of these built-in add-in programs, follow these steps:

  1. Click the File tab and then click Options.

    The Excel Options dialog box appears.

  2. Click the Add-Ins tab.

    The Add-Ins tab lists all the names, locations, and types of add-ins to which you have access.

  3. At the bottom of the dialog box, select Excel Add-Ins from the Manage drop-down box and click Go.

    Excel opens the Add-Ins dialog box showing all the names of the built-in add-in programs you can load.

    Activating built-in add-ins in the Add-Ins dialog box.
    Activating built-in add-ins in the Add-Ins dialog box.
  4. Select the check boxes for each add-in program that you want loaded in the Add-Ins Available list box.

    Click the name of the add-in in the Add-Ins Available list box to display a brief description of its function at the bottom of this dialog box.

  5. Click OK.

    An alert dialog box appears, asking you if you want to install each selected add-in.

  6. Click OK in each alert dialog box to install its add-in.

Excel automatically places command buttons for the activated add-ins in either an Analysis group on the Ribbon's Data tab or in a Solutions group on the Formulas tab, depending upon the type of add-in.

If you end up never using a particular add-in you've loaded, you can unload it (and thereby free up some computer memory) by following the previously outlined procedure to open the Add-Ins dialog box and then clicking the name of the add-in to remove the check mark from its check box. Then click OK.

About This Article

This article is from the book: 

About the book author:

Greg Harvey is a language scholar who has traced the roots of Tolkien’s work in European folklore and pre-Christian religious beliefs. He has studied 12 languages, including Elvish, Latin, and Anglo-Saxon.