You cannot widen individual cells. You widen columns. To do that you have to put the mouse between the two headings of a column, like between the A and B above those two columns. The mouse pointer will change and then click and drag to change the column width. Dragging always affects the column to the left of the mouse.
You cannot widen individual cells. You widen columns. To do that you have to put the mouse between the two headings of a column, like between the A and B above those two columns. The mouse pointer will change and then click and drag to change the column width. Dragging always affects the column to the left of the mouse.
You cannot widen individual cells. You widen columns. To do that you have to put the mouse between the two headings of a column, like between the A and B above those two columns. The mouse pointer will change and then click and drag to change the column width. Dragging always affects the column to the left of the mouse.
You cannot widen individual cells. You widen columns. To do that you have to put the mouse between the two headings of a column, like between the A and B above those two columns. The mouse pointer will change and then click and drag to change the column width. Dragging always affects the column to the left of the mouse.
You cannot widen individual cells. You widen columns. To do that you have to put the mouse between the two headings of a column, like between the A and B above those two columns. The mouse pointer will change and then click and drag to change the column width. Dragging always affects the column to the left of the mouse.
You cannot widen individual cells. You widen columns. To do that you have to put the mouse between the two headings of a column, like between the A and B above those two columns. The mouse pointer will change and then click and drag to change the column width. Dragging always affects the column to the left of the mouse.
You cannot widen individual cells. You widen columns. To do that you have to put the mouse between the two headings of a column, like between the A and B above those two columns. The mouse pointer will change and then click and drag to change the column width. Dragging always affects the column to the left of the mouse.
You cannot widen individual cells. You widen columns. To do that you have to put the mouse between the two headings of a column, like between the A and B above those two columns. The mouse pointer will change and then click and drag to change the column width. Dragging always affects the column to the left of the mouse.
You cannot widen individual cells. You widen columns. To do that you have to put the mouse between the two headings of a column, like between the A and B above those two columns. The mouse pointer will change and then click and drag to change the column width. Dragging always affects the column to the left of the mouse.
You cannot widen individual cells. You widen columns. To do that you have to put the mouse between the two headings of a column, like between the A and B above those two columns. The mouse pointer will change and then click and drag to change the column width. Dragging always affects the column to the left of the mouse.
You cannot widen individual cells. You widen columns. To do that you have to put the mouse between the two headings of a column, like between the A and B above those two columns. The mouse pointer will change and then click and drag to change the column width. Dragging always affects the column to the left of the mouse.
dont know & dont have friend what is the answer please
By using ATP.
What you do is widen the column, as an individual cell cannot be widened by itself. There are a few ways of widening a column. The simplest is to the the cursor between the column headings at the top of the worksheet with the column you want to widen being on the left. So if you wanted to widen Column A, go to where A and B are at the top of their columns and put the cursor in between the headings. If you do it correctly the cursor will change to having two arrows, one pointing left and one right, coming off a line in between them. Then press and hold the mouse button and drag to the right and column A will widen. Another way is having put the cursor in that position, to do a double click on the mouse. If there is any text in a cell in that column that is wider than the cell, the column will adjust to that width. the third way is to go to the Format Menu and pick Column and then Width.
To select a cell (If you are looking for the answer for an IT class.) Click on the cell using the mouse, or using the arrow keys, move the cursor to the cell you want. You could also press the F5 key and use the Goto command to go to the cell that you want to be active. You could also type its address into the Name Box. The Active Cell will show a black box around it or if it is part of a range it will be the only white cell. You'll also see the address of the Active Cell in the Name Box, beside the Formula Bar, so that you will know which cell it is.
Assuming you mean a cell in a spreadsheet program, when the contents are displayed as #####, it usually means the cell is not wide enough to display the contents. One way to widen the cell is to click and drag the mouse pointer at the edge of the column header. Another is to select the column and change the column width.
Active transport
Clicking on a different cell, using any of the navigation keys, such as the arrows or Page Up, Page Down etc. or pressing the Return or Enter keys can all change which is the active cell. Only one cell can be the active cell at any time, even if you have lots of cells selected. You can copy/cut and paste the contents of the active cell to another cell, which will then be the active cell.
At the bottom right corner of the active cell there is a small black square. By putting the mouse on that and then pressing and holding the right mouse button you drag across a formula.
You can use the mouse to put the cursor between the two column headings and drag to change the width of the column to the left. You can also place the cursor there and double click and it will widen or narrow itself to the longest content in a cell, known as Autofit. You can go the format menu and type in a value for the column width.You can use the mouse to put the cursor between the two column headings and drag to change the width of the column to the left. You can also place the cursor there and double click and it will widen or narrow itself to the longest content in a cell, known as Autofit. You can go the format menu and type in a value for the column width.You can use the mouse to put the cursor between the two column headings and drag to change the width of the column to the left. You can also place the cursor there and double click and it will widen or narrow itself to the longest content in a cell, known as Autofit. You can go the format menu and type in a value for the column width.You can use the mouse to put the cursor between the two column headings and drag to change the width of the column to the left. You can also place the cursor there and double click and it will widen or narrow itself to the longest content in a cell, known as Autofit. You can go the format menu and type in a value for the column width.You can use the mouse to put the cursor between the two column headings and drag to change the width of the column to the left. You can also place the cursor there and double click and it will widen or narrow itself to the longest content in a cell, known as Autofit. You can go the format menu and type in a value for the column width.You can use the mouse to put the cursor between the two column headings and drag to change the width of the column to the left. You can also place the cursor there and double click and it will widen or narrow itself to the longest content in a cell, known as Autofit. You can go the format menu and type in a value for the column width.You can use the mouse to put the cursor between the two column headings and drag to change the width of the column to the left. You can also place the cursor there and double click and it will widen or narrow itself to the longest content in a cell, known as Autofit. You can go the format menu and type in a value for the column width.You can use the mouse to put the cursor between the two column headings and drag to change the width of the column to the left. You can also place the cursor there and double click and it will widen or narrow itself to the longest content in a cell, known as Autofit. You can go the format menu and type in a value for the column width.You can use the mouse to put the cursor between the two column headings and drag to change the width of the column to the left. You can also place the cursor there and double click and it will widen or narrow itself to the longest content in a cell, known as Autofit. You can go the format menu and type in a value for the column width.You can use the mouse to put the cursor between the two column headings and drag to change the width of the column to the left. You can also place the cursor there and double click and it will widen or narrow itself to the longest content in a cell, known as Autofit. You can go the format menu and type in a value for the column width.You can use the mouse to put the cursor between the two column headings and drag to change the width of the column to the left. You can also place the cursor there and double click and it will widen or narrow itself to the longest content in a cell, known as Autofit. You can go the format menu and type in a value for the column width.
If there is nothing in the cells to the right, it is not a problem. You could widen the cell's column. You could wrap the text. You could create new lines in the text using Alt - Enter.
active transport
If there is nothing in the cells to the right, it is not a problem. You could widen the cell's column. You could wrap the text. You could create new lines in the text using Alt - Enter.