Wolfram Computation Meets Knowledge

Wolfram Knowledge about Rivers in Microsoft Excel

River entities include bodies of flowing water throughout the world.

A few example entities...

Amazon
Amur River
Columbia River
Danube
Ganges
Mekong
Nile
Sepik
Volga
Zambezi

You can access the following properties for each entity...

  • name
  • countries
  • source location
  • outflow location
  • wikipedia summary text
  • length
  • average discharge
  • drainage area
  • minimum discharge
  • maximum discharge
  • left bank tributaries
  • right bank tributaries
  • source
  • outflow
  • image
  • + more
  • - less

Note: Wolfram entities represent physical entities as well as mathematical and other scientific concepts. Each entity type has a unique set of properties. Wolfram entity types and properties correspond to "data types" and "fields" in Excel.

How to Use Wolfram Data in Excel

Note: This is now available with a Microsoft 365 Family or Personal subscription.

1

Highlight data and click the Automatic button

Select cells or columns in a table with the text to convert, then select the Automatic button in the Data Types gallery of the Data tab. Wolfram's natural language understanding will recognize the entities and convert them.

2

Browse associated data

Select the Insert Data button that appears to browse a list of all available properties. Select one to insert data into your workbook. When you have data in a table, Excel will automatically fill the table for you. Wolfram has hundreds of expertly curated entities in Excel, encompassing the sciences, arts, culture, and more.

3

Automatically get data

Once converted to an entity, you can use key Excel features to work with data pulled from Wolfram. Sort and Filter data, or create formulas that reference an entity's properties and values.

4

Browse more information

Selecting the icon of a converted cell opens a card where you can find detailed data from Wolfram. This means you don't need to leave Excel to accomplish your goals.

Compute with River data in the Wolfram Language