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February | 2015 | xll add-in library
https://xllblog.com/2015/02
High performance add-ins for Excel. Monthly Archives: February 2015. February 13, 2015. A quote by my mathematical hero John von Neumann Anyone who attempts to generate random numbers by deterministic means is, of course, living in a state of sin. Fat Tuesday is coming up and I got that out of the … Continue reading →. The xll add-in library. The newest new old thing. You can’t make this git up. And now for something completely similar. And now for something completely different. There is no royal road.
xllblog.com
March | 2015 | xll add-in library
https://xllblog.com/2015/03
High performance add-ins for Excel. Monthly Archives: March 2015. Nothin’ but INet. March 6, 2015. If you have Excel 2013 you might know about the WEBSERVICE function. Give it a URL and it returns the content as a string. You can use FILTERXML on the result and a dose of XPath to extract what you … Continue reading →. The xll add-in library. The newest new old thing. You can’t make this git up. And now for something completely similar. And now for something completely different. There is no royal road.
xllblog.com
July | 2014 | xll add-in library
https://xllblog.com/2014/07
High performance add-ins for Excel. Monthly Archives: July 2014. It’s not your default Will. July 6, 2014. The xll library uses C , which has a mechanism for default arguments, but the default value for an add-in is not a C default. No, really. It’s not your (C ) default Will. The fourth argument to Args: Arg allows default arguments … Continue reading →. The xll add-in library. The newest new old thing. You can’t make this git up. And now for something completely similar. There is no royal road.
xllblog.com
Use The Source Luke | xll add-in library
https://xllblog.com/2014/02/21/83/comment-page-1
High performance add-ins for Excel. It’s not your default Will →. Use The Source Luke. February 21, 2014. Developments in the new xll library. Now the latest latest. Developments in the new new xll library. This entry was posted in Uncategorized. It’s not your default Will →. Use The Source Luke. January 15, 2015 at 11:11 am. Hi, I’ve been a lurker around your blog for a few months. I love this article and your entire site! Looking forward to reading more! June 10, 2015 at 8:31 pm. Leave a Reply Cancel r...
xllblog.com
August | 2015 | xll add-in library
https://xllblog.com/2015/08
High performance add-ins for Excel. Monthly Archives: August 2015. August 14, 2015. I like to ignore advice people give me and figure things out for myself. It does me no good. My brand is I don’t give a fuck about my brand. If you find the code I write useful and can point … Continue reading →. The xll add-in library. The newest new old thing. You can’t make this git up. And now for something completely similar. And now for something completely different. There is no royal road. Andrzej's C blog.
xllblog.com
Nothin’ but INet | xll add-in library
https://xllblog.com/2015/03/06/nothin-but-inet
High performance add-ins for Excel. Protecting your brand. →. Nothin’ but INet. March 6, 2015. If you have Excel 2013 you might know about the. Function. Give it a URL and it returns the content as a string. You can use. On the result and a dose of XPath to extract what you are interested in if it happens to be XML. You can’t make this shit up:. NOTE: The WEBSERVICE function is not available in Excel Online. I put together xllinet. Library. The function. You can peek at the result with. Both arrays and o...
xllblog.com
kalx | xll add-in library
https://xllblog.com/author/kalx
High performance add-ins for Excel. The newest new old thing. May 16, 2016. Apologies to Raymond Chen: https:/ blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/oldnewthing/. Against my better judgement I rewrote the xll add-in library. Again. https:/ github.com/keithalewis/xll12. Still learning all the new C 11/14/17 good bits. And trying to avoid the crazy things that seem to be slipping into the latest … Continue reading →. You can’t make this git up. February 6, 2016. Hitler uses git: https:/ www.youtube.com/watch? I confess...
xllblog.com
Hooking up C++ to Excel | xll add-in library
https://xllblog.com/2015/01/02/hooking-up-c-to-excel
High performance add-ins for Excel. Hooking up C to Excel. January 2, 2015. For the gory details. Hooking up the latest C version of the random library helped me learn a few new tricks. No more. In C , things just keep getting simpler and better. To generate random variates using a distribution and an engine all you need to do is type. Is a distribution and. Is an engine. That is what this. Does, but it was not trivial to leverage the latest C goodness to make that happen. Leave a Reply Cancel reply.
xllblog.com
<random> | xll add-in library
https://xllblog.com/2015/02/13/155
High performance add-ins for Excel. Hooking up C to Excel. Nothin’ but INet →. February 13, 2015. A quote by my mathematical hero John von Neumann. Anyone who attempts to generate random numbers by deterministic means is, of course, living in a state of sin. Fat Tuesday is coming up and I got that out of the way: xllrandom. If you can’t be bothered to download and compile the code, use this. This entry was posted in Uncategorized. Hooking up C to Excel. Nothin’ but INet →. Leave a Reply Cancel reply.
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Protecting your brand. | xll add-in library
https://xllblog.com/2015/08/14/protecting-your-brand
High performance add-ins for Excel. Nothin’ but INet. There is no royal road. →. August 14, 2015. Bill Gates might not have been far off when he claimed secretaries would be writing code using some version of BASIC. Larry Wall came up with perl, Guido von Rossum came up with python. I am being politically incorrect, it is a form of censorship that I abhor, but these are all languages for people who can’t understand the complexity of modern computing. This entry was posted in Uncategorized. And now for so...