There are so many document editing tools on the market, but only some are suitable for all file types. Some tools are, on the other hand, versatile yet burdensome to work with. DocHub provides the answer to these issues with its cloud-based editor. It offers robust capabilities that enable you to complete your document management tasks efficiently. If you need to quickly Adapt formula in DBK, DocHub is the best choice for you!
Our process is extremely easy: you import your DBK file to our editor → it automatically transforms it to an editable format → you make all necessary changes and professionally update it. You only need a few minutes to get your paperwork ready.
Once all modifications are applied, you can transform your paperwork into a reusable template. You simply need to go to our editor’s left-side Menu and click on Actions → Convert to Template. You’ll locate your paperwork stored in a separate folder in your Dashboard, saving you time the next time you need the same form. Try DocHub today!
In this video, Im going to show you a little trick that couldcome in handy when youre copying formulas from one range to another range, and you dont want the cell references to change. So now, Im not talking about the Dollar Sign to fully fix the cell references because sometimes, you have a mix of relative and absolute referencing in your formulas. And normally, when you copy one Range to another, you do want these relative references to update. But, there might be a reason that you dont want that to happen. So, one way is like to go in the Formula Bar, copy the Formula, and paste it to another Cell. So, for one cell, thats fine. But what if you have a lot of cells and they use different relative referencing, right? So, thats going to become a major headache. So now, Im going to show you one trick that you can use to handle just that. Heres a sample Dataset. We have numbers that are input in this Range, and we have Formulas in here. Now, the formul