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Microsoft Office 2003: Introductory Concepts and Techniques

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This new second edition includes sufficient material for a first course on Office 2003 applications. Challenge students with all new In the Lab exercises. Help students reinforce key skills with Case Studies and online tools on the Companion Web site. Our Microsoft Office 2003, Second Edition books continue with the innovation, quality, and reliability that you have come to expect from the Shelly Cashman Series.

1152 pages, Paperback

First published November 17, 2003

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About the author

Gary B. Shelly

1,100 books15 followers
Gary B. Shelly wrote and published his first computer education textbook in 1969. More than twenty million copies of Shelly Cashman Series textbooks have since been sold.

Gary and a talented group of contributing authors have produced books on computer programming, computer concepts, and application software that are the leading textbooks in the computer technology market today. Gary has hosted the annual Shelly Cashman Institute, a week-long training event focusing on the latest topics in technology, for the past 34 years.

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550 reviews27 followers
January 5, 2019
This is an entry-level primer. It supplies step-by-step instructions for exersices which could be applied for personal projects. However, most of the stuff for Word, Powerpoint, Outlook, and Excel are what most people probably know or learn just from playing with the programs for a few hours. Each program was a separate section, then supdivised into projects from easy to advanced. In advanced there were a couple neat tricks in Excel that one would not find just messing around, and keyboard shortcuts did make an appearance. For Access, the program in the suite that seems ignored by school projects and most jobs that require MS Office competancy, the low-level approach was nice but there was absolutely nothing about the logic behind how things link up - nothing on the algorithm to hold in mind while making a database.
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