Good point, though not all spreadsheets are created equal. Some get quite unmanageable, and that can be a productivity bottleneck over time (unless you're not really adding new use cases)
Good point, though not all spreadsheets are created equal. Some get quite unmanageable, and that can be a productivity bottleneck over time (unless you're not really adding new use cases)
Maybe the real problem to solve is not killing Excel but providing a pathway for load-bearing Excel sheets to grow into full applications, development practices and all.
I feel like this is doable with a good LLM-assisted coding tool, but it's just a hunch.
I think the hardest part here is UI.
With Excel you get no-code immediate UI feedback in the cells.
Most people will use an Excel sheet as an array or a dataframe.