Welcome to the magic world of Excel animation!
– All the animated models are created using plain MS Excel and VBA.
– All the Excel files and PDF tutorials can be downloaded from BLOG page.
– All the downloads on this site are FREE and there are hundreds of them.
Hello!
Finding engineering work quite unchallenging lately I decided to start this blog in which to share cool ways of solving engineering problems or just interesting modeling of natural phenomena in MS Excel 2003.
I use cell formulas and VBA in order to take advantage of the ease of “programming” and the native speed of the Excel spreadsheet.
My name is George Lungu and I am the author of this blog. In my daily life I am a circuit designer.
Why bother with this blog?
1. It’s science, it’s physics, it’s electronics, mechanics, games …you name it. You could also suggest future directions of development
2. Engineering is coming back in force and it will rule again. Lots of people nowadays want to either manage or market that’s why we need more engineers.
3. It might be boring at times but it’s very useful stuff. I will give it a sugar coating by producing “live” models with at least some catchy animations and sound effects
4. You can understand most of it with just a high a school background. No computer language is necessary. A little visual basic (VBA) will be involved but you’ll learn that on-the-fly. We do search Wikipedia occasionally here but as a last resort.
5. If you follow this and begin to model your own ideas with your own methods you could build some real understanding of engineering. School is good for acquiring discipline and a background, but only you can teach yourself deep knowledge by personal experience. Learn by having fun!
6. This blog it’s just a lure. The best and most effective teacher lives inside you.
7. The most important aspect: no matter what you want to do, start by thinking and experimenting before reading or asking someone else (no matter who).
Trust me on this one, you are far smarter than you think (if you dare to use your mind).
One month of continuous pondering and experimentation will get you farther than a year of school.
Learn slowly, speed is a big spoiler. The traditional education system is built on speed and superficiality.
“External teachers” were taught one thing: compliance. And that’s what they will teach you.
Trust your “inner teacher” instead. You won’t be disappointed.
Why Excel?
- Excel is cheap and and you can find it everywhere.
- It’s a good environment to do complex programming without being a programmer. It gives you the feel of of a bread board. A donkey could use it…
- As opposed to regular programming languages, Excel is a two-dimensional programming canvass
- Excel has decent built in graphics (I like using 2D scatter plots)
- As a 2D matrix calculator, Excel it’s wickedly fast
- Excel has decent GUI capabilities within the program itself
- Programming in Excel gives you more understanding of physical processes than “black box” type programs such as Matlab, Simulink, Octave since in Excel you build everything from basic formulas
All right, Excel, but why versions to use?
2007 is slow and bugsy. While most of the models should work in most versions, if one is serious about speed, Excel 2003 or earlier is a better choice. In terms or charting speed the new Excel is about 10 times slower than the old Excel (see a 2008 study here). By the same study, with 1023 MB of RAM, the Excel 2007 Line charts take 15 to 22 times as long to redraw as the Excel 2003. The recalculation time is also slower in the new Excel, but only by about 30% (study).
And why Microsoft?
I have to admit that for introductory scientific modeling, Excel is a great overall choice out there. Though I am not against product evolution, I decry the drop in speed (mainly charting speed) in the last versions of Excel. And by the way, while Open Office “Calc” is alright for filling taxes, it is about one order of magnitude slower than Excel for large calculations. I admire the open-source initiatives though.
https://www.mail-archive.com/users@openoffice.org/msg80893.html
Hi, George,
every time I read your blog, I understand you did a real good job!
My hat is off to you !
Looking forward to your new posts, all of them are just awesome..
I’m thinking of developing a digital counter that displays sum of a column in EXCEL as this column is undated manually in an animate way like a digital counter display. Any urgent help highly appreciated
Ansari, it must be fairly easy. Are you in the US?
Excellent blog page. I wish to learn more excel VBA tutorials.
I am beginner in VBA. This sitehas lots of creativity. the best so far
keep it up
a very useful, enlightening and informative site, well done !!
I LOVE this!!!!! though I have always liked excel above all other microsoft progs it is only now that I am digging more into it and seeing more and more and more potential for my students (engineering degree level)
Planning on doing a lot more and this is really inspiring.
hallo george, many thanks. i’ll give it another try with excel. the visualization parts are done with my proprietary 3d visualizer (solidworks -> modo -> i-spot). i’ll put it online for free once it’s finished.
hello george, thanks for this fantastic webpage and your impressive work collection. I’m working on a dynamic simulation for the development and automatic optimization of smart energy grids in open office. the model is rather complex and excel failed in the early stage with countless crashes (macbook pro with bootcamp). what ms excel version would you recommend ?
Vielen Dank Andreas! I always recommend anything from 97′ to 2003. but 2010 or later is still good but a bit slow as chart animations are concerned. The earlier versions are about 5x faster. Do you animate? Also if animation is not that important but you have very large computations (million cell tables for instance) go with 2010 or later. For the best artistic impression, colors, etc, use 2010 or later. For ease of development, intuitive user interface, etc, use 2003 or earlier. Tschüß
Happy to see this site active once again in the new format! Honestly had missed it! Looking forward for many more fantastic things you do in Excel! Thanks for restarting it.
Thanks Jagmohan!
I must say you have high quality posts here.
Your website can go viral. You need initial boost only.
How to get it? Search for: Etorofer’s strategies
Simply Fantastic and motivating stuff!
Congratulations!