this post was submitted on 22 Aug 2023
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I hear you.
I don't know how new Excel performes and I thought it's the same as ten years ago - the version I'm trapped in. With people who obsessively try to drive it to the edge where it's not responsive on average office PCs.
But if it works well with various big spreadsheets now, it's a wonder, with how many new people start to tackle programming with Python. I obiviosly won't write a script faster than normal operational speeds of software, it's just some tables ended up that big and broken I could only open them like that. But that, I guess, is exclusion?
It's just the issue of people using a microscope as a hammer when they need to break nuts.
So, assuming you're still on Office 2010, you're missing (off the top of my head, but I believe these were all Excel 2013 or later):
A2:A300
garbage where Excel would instead just have e.g.SomeTable[Heading]
. E.g., an actual formula from a sheet I currently maintain to track my team's sprints:=XLOOKUP([@Verified],SprintMeta[Start],SprintMeta[Sprint Name],"Unknown",-1)
. Python's easier to read here, but this is honestly doing a lot while being surprisingly readable (especially if you're familiar withXLOOKUP
, which is basically how you do keyed array access in Excel)You have totally legitimate gripes about Excel; I'm not denying that. But I do think that you might be pleasantly surprised on newer versions.