Stevethesweep

Q: where has text auto complete gone in new numbers

Before I upgraded to new Numbers yesterday 24/10/2013 it was possible to have auto complete suggest words

previously typed in cells. This feature does not seem to exist in the latest version of numbers

Can anyone help... thanks

iMac, OS X Mavericks (10.9)

Posted on Oct 25, 2013 1:57 AM

Close

Q: where has text auto complete gone in new numbers

  • All replies
  • Helpful answers

  • by Jerrold Green1,Solvedanswer

    Jerrold Green1 Jerrold Green1 Oct 25, 2013 2:51 PM in response to Stevethesweep
    Level 7 (30,001 points)
    Oct 25, 2013 2:51 PM in response to Stevethesweep

    Just keep using the Numbers '09 that you were using before the update was issued.

     

    Jerry

  • by Stevethesweep,

    Stevethesweep Stevethesweep Oct 26, 2013 4:54 AM in response to Jerrold Green1
    Level 1 (0 points)
    Oct 26, 2013 4:54 AM in response to Jerrold Green1

    Thanks I've done what you suggested.

     

    Steve

  • by Thomas B. Robison,

    Thomas B. Robison Thomas B. Robison Oct 27, 2013 1:42 AM in response to Stevethesweep
    Level 1 (20 points)
    Oct 27, 2013 1:42 AM in response to Stevethesweep

    Sad to see that, Auto-Completion, was stripped in, Numbers 3.  I'm only a novice user, but I can't use Numbers 3 until, if ever, Apple reinstates it.  I have a feeling that this feature is not compatible with iCloud and iOS devices.

     

    Good thing I didn't delete Numbers 2.3!!

  • by k8neville,

    k8neville k8neville Oct 31, 2013 4:24 AM in response to Thomas B. Robison
    Level 1 (4 points)
    iPhone
    Oct 31, 2013 4:24 AM in response to Thomas B. Robison

    Thanks for confirming that I hadn't gone crazy.  Gone back to the earlier Numbers...

  • by BigDave469,

    BigDave469 BigDave469 Nov 2, 2013 11:28 AM in response to k8neville
    Level 1 (4 points)
    iPad
    Nov 2, 2013 11:28 AM in response to k8neville

    Well that is not acceptable!  There should be some fix for this!  Why take out something that is not broken?!  Come on Apple I am expecting more from my freee software!

  • by motard,

    motard motard Nov 5, 2013 6:49 AM in response to Jerrold Green1
    Level 1 (8 points)
    iPhone
    Nov 5, 2013 6:49 AM in response to Jerrold Green1

    Numbers 09 appears to have been deleted during the 'upgrade' to numbers for Mavericks. Can it still be downloaded? Without auto-complete the app is a significant downgrade from the earlier version.

  • by Gerald Edgar,

    Gerald Edgar Gerald Edgar Nov 5, 2013 7:01 AM in response to motard
    Level 3 (796 points)
    Mac OS X
    Nov 5, 2013 7:01 AM in response to motard

    Numbers 09 appears to have been deleted during the 'upgrade' 

     

    and of course you have no Time Machine (or other) backup?

  • by motard,

    motard motard Nov 5, 2013 7:26 AM in response to Gerald Edgar
    Level 1 (8 points)
    iPhone
    Nov 5, 2013 7:26 AM in response to Gerald Edgar

    Yep, I have TM on my home imac but not on the mac mini where I am now for the next month! I suppose I will have to wait until I get back to the UK.

  • by enuenu,

    enuenu enuenu Dec 14, 2013 2:40 AM in response to motard
    Level 1 (4 points)
    Dec 14, 2013 2:40 AM in response to motard

    I just bought my first Apple devices, I plunged in with an iMac and iPads for the family. After using numbers for a week or so and reading threads like this, I am already wondering where exactly Apple is going as far as office productivity apps go.

     

    Have Apple waved the white flag to MS and exiting stage right from the productivity apps arena? Seems so, as some absolute basic funtionality seems to have been removed lately. This thread is not the only example of regression I have already found and I am a very basic user. Very puzzling. Do I bother learning Pages, Numbers, Keynote etc or have Apple cast them adrift?

  • by SGIII,

    SGIII SGIII Dec 14, 2013 2:56 AM in response to enuenu
    Level 6 (10,796 points)
    Mac OS X
    Dec 14, 2013 2:56 AM in response to enuenu

    Hi enuenu,

     

    Apple seems to be actively developing iWorks apps again after a long hiatus. The big push has been to make the apps work well with both Macs and iOS devices, something that MS has not been able to match. The tradeoff so far has been elimination of some features that are hard to implement in iOS. Apple has announced in this support document that auto-complete and several other features will be reintroduced, however.

     

    But even after "auto-complete" is brought back you might want to consider formatting the cells in the column as Pop-Up Menu if you frequently enter repeating values in a column and don't want to type the same text over and over again.

     

    In many situations, particularly if you want to avoid typos or capitalization inconsistencies creeping in and messing up your data, Pop-Up Menu is better than "auto-complete." It is much enhanced over what it was in Numbers 2.3, and is easy to set up:

     

    pop-up-choose-format.png

     

    Select the whole column or range before formatting as Pop-Up Menu and your existing values in that column or range will pre-populate a menu automatically:

     

     

    pop-up-format-column.png

     

     

    Then you can remove the values you don't want in the list, such as the column header (and possibly some previous spelling errors too!):

     

    pop-up-remove-item.png

     

     

    And after this easy one-time setup all you have to do thereafter is to choose from the pop-up list when you add rows:

    pop-up-choose.png

     

     

    See this post for more details on how this handy feature has been enhanced in Numbers 3.0.

     

    If you want to use Numbers on an iPad or iPhone, in a touch interface pop-ups are far more efficient than typing the first few letters of items. You can scroll with ease through a list of dozens of items to make a pick. Anybody using Numbers cross-platform should favor Pop-Up so they can use their documents efficiently for data input on the go, which can be a productivity booster.

     

    Also, auto-complete is not as good a choice as Pop-Up Menu even for keyboard-intensive work on the Mac if you've got numerous hard-to-spell values, particularly if some are capitalized and some not, where the capitalization can be significant. The Pop-Up Menu approach, unlike auto-complete, eliminates spelling inconsistencies or lack of capitalization when there should be capitalization, etc.

     

    See this thread for this and other workarounds for Numbers 3.0.

     

    SG

  • by enuenu,

    enuenu enuenu Dec 14, 2013 3:42 AM in response to SGIII
    Level 1 (4 points)
    Dec 14, 2013 3:42 AM in response to SGIII

    Hi SGIII,

    Thanks for such an informative response, much appreciated. I will examine it in detail. Good to hear that Apple are not letting their productivity apps fade away. One of the reasons I would prefer to persevere and learn Pages, Numbers and Keynote (rather than jump to MS Office) is that it leaves scope to do real work on iPads.

    Regards

    enuenu

  • by SGIII,

    SGIII SGIII Dec 14, 2013 4:04 AM in response to enuenu
    Level 6 (10,796 points)
    Mac OS X
    Dec 14, 2013 4:04 AM in response to enuenu

    One of the reasons I would prefer to persevere and learn Pages, Numbers and Keynote (rather than jump to MS Office) is that it leaves scope to do real work on iPads.

     

    If your goal is to do real work on iPads then I think the current version of iWork is at least one step ahead of MS.  It will be interesting to see how Apple continues to develop it.  As it stands now, Numbers for iOS is surprisingly effective at entering data that syncs back automatically to the Mac. It's also good at displaying spreadsheets in an attractive and interactive way that can be more efficient than printing out piles of stuff.  Numbers on the Mac is clearly better for setting up spreadsheets from scratch.  Used together with Numbers for iOS it already provides an innovative environment that takes advantage of the Apple ecosystem in a way that MS may have trouble matchng. As the processing power of iOS devices grows, I'm hoping it will get better.

     

    SG