Computer Science, asked by Maya1301, 5 months ago

Explain absolute and relative reference in brief with the help of an example.

Answers

Answered by princeverma90
1

Answer:

Absolute references are noted by a dollar sign in front of the cell reference. So a relative cell reference might look like =A1+A2 but an absolute reference might look like =$A$1+$A$2. (Actually, the formula can also look like =$A1+$A2 or =A$1+A$2, but let's not get ahead of ourselves.)

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Answered by IQcrabby77
1

Answer:

An absolute cell reference is a cell address that contains a dollar sign ($) in the row or column coordinate, or both. When you enter a cell reference in a formula, Excel assumes it is a relative reference unless you change it to an absolute reference

ex.......

absolute cell references. ... For example, "$C$3" refers to cell C3, and "$C$3" will work exactly the same as "C3", expect when you copy the formula. Note: when entering formulas you can use the F4 key right after entering a cell reference to toggle among the different relative/absolute versions of that cell address.

Relative cell references are basic cell references that adjust and change when copied or when using AutoFill. Example: =SUM(B5:B8), as shown below, changes to =SUM(C5:C8) when copied across to the next cell.

ex.........

By default, a cell reference is a relative reference, which means that the reference is relative to the location of the cell. If, for example, you refer to cell A2 from cell C2, you are actually referring to a cell that is two columns to the left (C minus A)—in the same row (2).

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