Replace broken brackets in Excel with clear, flexible Power Query rules that handle real-world data effortlessly.
Use Power Query's M language to quickly fix names, remove hidden characters, extract numbers, and merge columns.
A winter storm has left thousands of We Energies customers without power across southeastern Wisconsin. As of 6 a.m., approximately 10,000 customers were experiencing outages statewide. Washington ...
DES MOINES — Teachers in Iowa’s K-12 schools would have the authority to temporarily remove students from their classroom under various proposals being considered by state lawmakers. The Iowa House ...
Plug Power's latest quarterly report has energized bullish sentiment on the stock. The company is still posting big losses and won't be paying a dividend anytime soon. Investors who take a 25-year buy ...
China and France are retrofitting coal and nuclear plants to operate more intermittently, reflecting how growing renewable penetration is reshaping traditional base-load generation economics. Gas ...
New laptops with ARM processors (such as some Surface models) run older software through an emulation layer, which can cause Power Query to crash. Installing the native ARM64 version of Office allows ...
COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Senate Republicans want any new power plant built in Ohio to generate electricity that’s affordable, reliable and clean. It sounds simple, almost like a campaign slogan. But ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Sceenshot of interview with PC Sheriff Keith Swank discussing bill to allow state board to decertify sheriffs (The Center Square) ...
Ctrl + Home – Navigate to the top left of your dataset Ctrl + End – Navigate to bottom right corner of your dataset Ctrl + Arrow keys – Jump from one side of table to the other in the direction of the ...
The U.S. bans Chinese software in connected cars starting March 17, forcing automakers to purge code fast. Could this stall Chinese brands in America? Automakers must remove Chinese-written code from ...
In a report from The Wall Street Journal, automakers are racing to strip Chinese-written code from internet-connected vehicles as sweeping U.S. national-security regulations take effect. Beginning ...