press ESC
It moves to the next cell, to the right. If anything is being typed in when the tab key is pressed it will enter the data in that cell and then move to the next cell.
in a cell
In Excel, to enter data in a cell, you must first select the desired cell by clicking on it. Once the cell is selected, you can start typing the data directly, and it will appear in both the cell and the formula bar. After entering the data, you can press Enter to confirm the input and move to the next cell.
Yes. If you press ESC before entering typed data into a cell (e.g. press ENTER), the cell will return to the same condition as before you started typing.
Where a row and column intersect is a cell. To enter data into a cell, first select it and then type in what you want in the cell. Finally, press enter.
The Delete key.
Control Enter can do a few special things. It will stay in the same cell after you've pressed it instead of moving to another cell. This can be useful if you keep wanting to change the value in the same cell. A really good thing it can do is enter data into multiple cells. If you select a group of cells and type something into the active cell and then press Control Enter, it will enter what you type into the selected cells. You can use that to put the same value into a load of cells at once. You can also use it to enter formulas that you would normally enter into one cell and then copy to the other cells.
active cell
In Excel, you cannot use the Escape (Esc) key to enter data in a cell.
Click on a cell and type in what you want to enter.
cell
if you are typing in the bar with the little curvy f by it, it doesn't show up anywhere until you've pressed enter if you are using a function. if you are typing straight into the cell(or aren't using a function) it shows up in that line and in the cell.