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!
-Rich
You may actually perform it byfile recovery for excel 2007
You cannot change the gridlines as such. They can be shown or hidden. You can put borders around cells, which are different. Borders can be changed in many ways, like having them in different colours or styles or thickness. Press Ctrl - 1 to open the Format Cells dialog box. In that there is a border tab from where you can change add borders and format them in the way you want.
In Excel 2003:
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.
Or in Excel 2007:
Go to view menu....Then...click gridlines option to get it restored.
Go to the Tools menu. Under Options, pick the View tab and on it remove the tick beside Gridlines. That will remove them. If you have any borders drawn around cells, they will remain and would have to be cleared separately.
goto Excel options, under a section called "Display options for this worksheet" check or uncheck the "show gridlines"
Go to the Tools menu. Under Options, pick the View tab and on it check the box in front of Gridlines. That will display them. Uncheck the box to hide them again.
the lines between cells
False
You can create a form with MS Excel that has both horizontal and vertical gridlines, you just format the borders of the cells you want to display.
They are separated by gridlines, although the gridlines can be turned off. EAch column is identified by a different letter or combination of letters.
You can't do that. What you do is use borders. Put borders around the cells you want. Then print the document with no gridlines, and the borders you have will be printed.
The grid is a worksheet and is created by gridlines.
The worksheet.
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
Rows and Columns and the "boxes" are called cells
You may mean the gridlines that visually define a cell, or borders that can be drawn around a cell.
The actual lines are known as gridlines, both vertical and horizontal. A vertical line of cells is known as a row.
It sounds as though you want to switch of the display of gridlines (Which don't print, by the way). Go to the Tools > Options menu and select the 'View' tab. Clear the checkmark next to 'Gridlines'.