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Today, weamp;#39;re going to talk about the hash reference in Excel. A common question I get is what is that hash sign I keep using in my videos when Iamp;#39;m referencing cells? Well, if you have Microsoft 365, you already have that hash sign and you should be using it because itamp;#39;s going to make your life a lot simpler. Let me show you how. Here I have some sample data which is not formatted as an Excel table. First of all, let me show you where you canamp;#39;t use the hash sign. So you canamp;#39;t just go typing in equals, reference A3, put in hash and expect your results to spill and pick up the range from A3 to D18, thatamp;#39;s not going to happen. And the reason it doesnamp;#39;t happen is that this is not a spilled range. You can only use the hash sign when you reference a range thatamp;#39;s spilling. Now, how do you recognize spilled range? Well, let me show you. First of all, letamp;#39;s create a spilled range. How do you do that? Well split ranges are ge