The Ctrl key.
No. You need to use the Ctrl key to select non adjacent ranges.
Yes, I can.
Hold down the Ctrl key as you click on the files you want to select.
The Ctrl key can do it, when used in conjunction with the mouse. You can also use the F8 key to select cells, and using combinations with shift, you can select non-adjacent cells.
An adjacent group of cells are known as a range or a block. There is no particular name for a group of non-adjacent cells.
Prime,Choice,and Select,in that order,best is prime then choice,than select
In Excel, an adjacent cell range is the selection of nearby cell range that is touching another range, but is still a separate range. A non-adjacent cell range is the selection of cell range that is not touching any other cell range. In either case, it can only be when more than one range is selected. After selecting one range, pressing and holding the Ctrl key while selecting a range can select another range.
Non-adjacent cells are cells that do not touch each other. Cell A3 and Cell D9 are non-adjacent. A3 and B3 or A3 and A4 would both be sets of adjacent cells.
The diagonal joins two non-adjacent vertices in a rectangle.
A range can only be cells that are adjacent and in a rectangular shape. It is possible to select non-adjacent cells but this would not be regarded as a range. Each would be a separate range. So usually non-adjacent ranges will have gaps between them, although it is possible to have cells from to separate ranges right beside each other. You will know them by their boundaries around them.
Adjacent cells are cells that are together, and do not have other cells between each other. A cell beside another one are together called adjacent cells, as are cells that are above or below each other and touching. So A1 and A2 are adjacent cells, as are B1 and C1. A1 and C1 are not adjacent cells as B1 is between them. A1, B1 and C1 would be adjacent cells.