Tracking Stats

Tracking Stats

Postby nevdully's » Sat Feb 04, 2012 7:19 pm

Can anyone teach this old dog a new trick?
nevdully's
 
Posts: 55
Joined: Tue Jul 03, 2012 2:34 pm

Postby AeroDave10 » Sat Feb 04, 2012 7:49 pm

What trick do you want to learn?
AeroDave10
 
Posts: 55
Joined: Tue Jul 03, 2012 2:34 pm

Postby nevdully's » Sat Feb 04, 2012 9:45 pm

How to do it...the whole 9 yards....Starting with the simple question is Excel the best to put them on?
nevdully's
 
Posts: 55
Joined: Tue Jul 03, 2012 2:34 pm

Postby AeroDave10 » Sat Feb 04, 2012 11:37 pm

I use Excel for a lot of SOM related stuff. It's good for calculating things on large groups of data very quickly. "Tracking stats" still sounds pretty vague to me. What exactly do you want to track?
AeroDave10
 
Posts: 55
Joined: Tue Jul 03, 2012 2:34 pm

Postby nevdully's » Sun Feb 05, 2012 11:09 am

I'd like to keep my cumulative actuals just like diamond dope
nevdully's
 
Posts: 55
Joined: Tue Jul 03, 2012 2:34 pm

Postby childsmwc » Sun Feb 05, 2012 2:13 pm

Nev,

If you are trying to keep a data base of your historical stats, Access might be the better long term solution over Excel, since it is a data base program. I however am not an Access user, so anything I do is in Excel. Excel will however slow down if you track enough data, and then have too many pivot tables and other reports and formulas running in the background/foreground.

Because Access is a data base it typically runs better and can handle larger blocks of data over Excel. If you are comfortable with pivot tables and the like in Excel, you can still house the data in Access and run pivot tables against the data so your outputs are in Excel.

Mark
childsmwc
 
Posts: 55
Joined: Tue Jul 03, 2012 2:34 pm


Return to Strat-O-Matic Baseball: All-Time Greats

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 24 guests

cron