Use Print Preview.
Printer preview is used to see what the document will look like when printed onto paper. It allows the user to make any changes to the document before using the printer.
As you are working on it, you can see it. To see what it will look like when it is printed, you use the Print Preview facility.
There are 2 benefits of CMYK colors:You can preview your work to see how it will look like when printed (preview is very close not exact)Files with CMYK colors are ready for professional offset printing.
Print starts the printing process. Print Preview opens a window showing an example of how the printed pages will look and give you an opportunity to change the page layout if you don't like what you see.
preview
It is the view that shows you how the document will look if you print it.
its kinda like a preview
To preview is to look at something, often before it is finished. You can use Print Preview in Word to look at what way the document would appear on a printed page. You can then adjust it and do things like change margins to adjust how the page will look. This is done before printing, saving you printing a few versions before getting one you are happy with. You can use Print Preview to do that for you, and when you are happy you can then print it.
Preview does NOT mean to look forward to. Preview means something more like .. seeing something ahead of the normal timeframe. Like a movie preview, which is an advance showing before its public opening. For "to look forward to" - you might be thinking of the word - Anticipate.
The movie preview got them excited about the new release. He was able to preview the items for sale by simply being nice to the security guard.
You need to enclose the workbook name in square brackets, then specify the sheet in that workbook and then the particular cell. So if you wanted to refer to cell A10 on Sheet2 of a workbook called Sales.xls then the reference would be like this: =[Sales.xls]Sheet2!A10
A) Live preview