You can’t make document modifications more convenient than editing your TXT files on the web. With DocHub, you can access instruments to edit documents in fillable PDF, TXT, or other formats: highlight, blackout, or erase document fragments. Include text and images where you need them, rewrite your copy completely, and more. You can save your edited record to your device or submit it by email or direct link. You can also transform your documents into fillable forms and invite others to complete them. DocHub even provides an eSignature that allows you to certify and send out documents for signing with just a couple of clicks.
Your documents are securely stored in our DocHub cloud, so you can access them anytime from your desktop computer, laptop, smartphone, or tablet. If you prefer to use your mobile device for file editing, you can easily do it with DocHub’s mobile app for iOS or Android.
Today weamp;#39;re going to cover a formula I had never seen before. Itamp;#39;s technically not a formula. Itamp;#39;s special syntax in a formula that Iamp;#39;d never seen. If youamp;#39;ve seen this syntax before, or youamp;#39;re using it in your Excel formulas in your files, please let me know in the comments, because Iamp;#39;d be really interested to see how youamp;#39;re using it. So let me give you some context. What we want to do is to count the text values in here, so in our output column, and we want to exclude numbers and formulas that result in blank cells or empty streaks. If you take a look at the output column, it looks like we have one, two, three, four, five texts in there and one number. Our formula should just give us the number of text cells in there. So it should exclude this number. But hereamp;#39;s the thing, it should exclude these blank cells and you should also exclude formula results that end up giving us empty strings. So in this case, this is n