No. A spreadsheet grid is made of rows and columns, not diagonals.
No. Rows are horizontal. Columns are vertical.
The program is a Spreadsheet. eg Microsoft Excel
It depends on the spreadsheet program, but in most of the ones I'm familiar with they're labelled with letters while the rows are typically labelled with numbers.
1. word processing. 2. program that allows you to create, edit and print text document. 3. spreadsheet; rows and columns.
Yes it is. It is a free and open source spreadsheet program.
It is one of the many spreadsheet applications that have computerised the paper-based spreadsheet, so Excel is therefore a spreadsheet program.
The spreadsheet is a very handy tool for calculative and numerical operations. The first spreadsheet was introduced by Later Dan Bricklin and Bob Frankston in 1978 named "VisiCalc" and this word compressed from the phrase "visible calculator". The first spreadsheet has 5 columns and 20 rows. After "VisiCalc" the second spreadsheet is "Multiplan" which was introduced by Microsoft in 1982.
The answer you are looking for would be a Spreadsheet, but those things can also be done with Word Processors and Databases, amongst other applications.
Spreadsheet is a computer program used for calculating, organising, analysing data, and display results
This might be referring to Microsoft Excel. It's a spreadsheet-based application that tracks information in rows and columns and can perform mathematical functions with the individual intersection points of those rows and columns, called "cells." It's usually used for accounting purposes but has many other uses.
Lotus 1-2-3 is a spreadsheet program.
A spread sheet program, such as Micosoft Excel or Lotus 123, is a pre-developed and pre-tested software program that allows a user who knows how to use the program to produce an output, commonly referred to as a spread sheet. The producer is the program and its output is a spreadsheet.
yes