Forum Discussion
ZacPhil2
Mar 08, 2022Copper Contributor
Correlation Analysis
I am trying to use the Analysis ToolPak to create a correlational analysis graph but when I input my input range and output range and all that, then click OK, it says Input Range must contain at leas...
- Jun 21, 2017
Thanks Matt, glad you ar liking Stream.
Right now we don't have a transcription editor in Stream directly. However you can download the auto-generated caption file, edit it locally in a text editor and re-upload it.
So it would be as follows...
- After the autogenerated caption file is created and shows the transcript mode on the video.
- Edit the video
- Options section > Captions > "Download file"
- Open up the .VTT file downloaded in a text editor, make corrections, etc.
- Go back and edit the video > Options > Captions
- Uncheck the "autogenerate a caption file" check box.
- "Upload a caption" file button.
- Upload your edited .VTT file.
We'll then use your new custom caption file for the transcript mode and deep search.
NOTE: We'll be adding ability to edit the transcript direclty in Stream in the future as I know the above isn't intuitive or easy.
Grahmfs13
Microsoft
Mar 08, 2022ZacPhil2, have you tried locking these cells within the correlation dialogue box? See example attached.
- ZacPhil2Mar 08, 2022Copper ContributorJust tried that and it worked thank you so much!
- villageidiotSep 25, 2022Copper ContributorI just ran into the the same thing today - but on Windows. As you said in a reply, it is a surprisingly obvious bug to get out in the first place; but to still be unfixed a year after being reported is not a good impression for Microsoft.
- JKPieterseSep 26, 2022Silver ContributorI'm afraid this is something that Microsoft would call "By design". Search and replace has never retained the formatting of the individual characters in a cell. If you would like the Excel team to change that behavior, you can go to the Help tab, click the feedback button and then click the "I have a suggestion" button.
- villageidiotSep 26, 2022Copper ContributorGiven it changes the formatting for words and characters that were not involved in the replace, it does seem like it would be a rather strange intentional design choice though. Imho, it feels like a pretty obvious bug. Regardless, I suppose only the Excel team know for sure - thank you for the tip on how to provide more direct feedback!
- JKPieterseAug 12, 2021Silver Contributor
Elizur In-cell formatting has always been fragile and cumbersome if you ask me. I hardly ever use it. That being said, Excel is not a word processor, it is a calculation engine.
What would you do when the searched string has mixed formatting, like 'these words' in this string:"I was looking for these words"
- ElizurAug 12, 2021Copper Contributor
Jan, I acknowledge that Excel is numbers-oriented and I do not expect Excel to be as word processing functional as, say, Word. But OTOH, I certainly do expect Excel -- an extremely widespread, longstanding product by a major software company, which has gone through umpteen revisions -- to have ironed out major bugs in the limited word processing functions it does offer. [i.e., "first, do no harm.] Since Excel offers "search and replace" of selected text, that function should work without damaging other text. Who would think that searching and replacing one word would wipe out all formatting everywhere in all text in all cells containing that word, including text that was not to be searched and replaced? And I can't believe that I, a non-technical person who has used Excel lightly for decades, would be the one to discover that it does. Surely, Excel engineers have long known about that rather fundamental search and replace bug, but not fixed it.
As to your question, my version of Excel (Microsoft 365 subscription) does not allow me to indicate the formatting of a searched term, so I couldn't search and replace by font. It entirely disregards the lack or presence of formatting when it searches and replaces. So, had I wanted to change the formatting in a word anywhere or everywhere, I believe I would have had to search for each occurrence of that word and change it manually where desired. But again, my problem is that I searched and replaced one word and it replaces all types of formatting throughout the entire cell -- not "just" in the searched and replaced term.