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Not really. There are a few things you could do though. You could do something like put a border around the cells you want to use, or have them a different colour. You can turn off the gridlines in a spreadsheet, by going into the Tools Menu and picking Options and going to the View tab, and removing the tick beside Gridlines. You can then select the cells you want and put full borders around them. For printing purposes you can set a Print Area by selecting the cells you want and going to that option in the File Menu.
Try this (instructions for Excel 2000) From the file menu, select page set up Click on sheet tab Click the box next to gridlines Click OK
Gridlines are the outlines of the cells in a table, to show you where the cells are. These are different to borders, which are lines you draw and are normally automatically included in a table. Borders can be formatted to be different colours or styles or thickness etc. You can remove borders, but gridlines are fundamental to a table. They can't be formatted. They are there for a guide to you to define the table. You can show or hide gridlines and when you print, it is borders that form the lines around the cells, so if you don't have them, you can see your data laid out in a tabular form, with no lines around them. Sometimes that is what you want.
you can through it away in the trash can on the screen
Go to the Tools menu. Click on the Options option. Then, on the view tab, you will see a checkbox beside Gridlines in the lower part. Tick that then click OK and your gridlines will be shown.If that doesn't work; which it probably won't! Then highlight involved cells the right click and choose "delete." Then pick shift cells up or shift cells down and enter. Voila!-RichYou may actually perform it byfile recovery for excel 2007
Lacquer thinner.
clik alt + c
You can ink by smothering the rubber in vasaline and bleach
For me any Spreadsheet software lacking graph and/or chart capability would be useless. If Microsoft ever chooses to remove these, switch to freeware Spreadsheet software (e.g. OpenOffice)
Before printing your document, go into File>Print Options located on the document's screen. Look through the settings and remove the "Time/Date Mark".
A squeegee would be used in screen printing to force ink through the printing screen and onto the substrate. It can also be used in cleaning, to remove the cleaning fluid or water from a flat surface.
Yes. Any time you make any adjustment to a spreadsheet, it is recalculated, so that the changes can be implemented and new results will be displayed. This is known as automatic recalculation. The only exception is when you have a spreadsheet set to manual recalculation. In that case, you press the F9 key to do the recalculations.