What's New in Excel (June 2022)
Welcome to the June 2022 update. We are excited to share the general availability of sheet protection and semi-select for links creation in the web for Excel for the web and automatic alt text suggestions for charts and PivotCharts across Excel for Windows and Excel for Mac – among other features. For Insiders, we’re rolling out the ability to insert data from picture in Excel for Windows.
Excel for the web
Sheet protection
“PivotTable Connections” in slicer settings pane
Semi-select for links creation
Excel for Windows
Data from Picture (Insider Beta)
Automatic alt text suggestions on charts and PivotCharts (Current Channel & Monthly Enterprise Channel)
Excel for Mac
Automatic alt text suggestions on charts and PivotCharts
Sheet protection
Excel for the web now supports enabling and configuring sheet protection. Users can now turn sheet protection on and off, temporarily pause protection for just their session, and configure unlocked ranges and other sheet protection options.
“PivotTable Connections” in slicer settings pane
Customize which slicer applies to which PivotTable – now in Excel for the web! Choose your slicer connections in the PivotTable settings in Excel for the web.
Semi-select for links creation
Create workbook links using cross-workbook formula selection, also known as semi-select – now in Excel for the web.
Data from Picture (Insiders Beta)
Provide automatic alt-text suggestions on charts and PivotCharts (Current Channel & Monthly Enterprise Channel)
Are you frustrated by charts missing their alternative text, so you don’t know what the chart is conveying? Now, Excel automatically recognizes and generates alt text if you’re using a screen reader and you land on a chart or Pivot Chart that is missing it.
Provide automatic alt-text suggestions on charts and PivotCharts
Excel now automatically recognizes and generates alt text if you’re using a screen reader and you land on a chart or Pivot Chart that is missing it.
Import from local text, CSV, and XLSX files with data preview
You can now import data from local files such as Excel workbooks, Text and CSV files, using Power Query in Excel for Mac.