Usually, 10 rows and 80 columns.
Nope, 12 rows and 80 columns.
The top two rows are zone rows, originally used for signs and control functions but now used for encoding alphabetic and special characters. The bottom ten rows are digit rows.
Actually in EBCDIC, the top three and bottom two rows (called rows 12, 11, 0, 8, 9) are zone rows and the bottom ten rows (called 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9) are digit rows. If there are no punches in a column that column is blank, if there is only one punch in a digit row in a column that column is a digit, if there is one punch in row 12 or 11 or multiple punches in a column that column is an alphabetic or special character. In EBCDIC there can never be more than 6 punches in any column: all five zones punched and one punch in digits 1 through 7. Note that rows 0, 8, 9 are both zone and digit rows.
7 columns * 8 rows = 56 units
No. They are orthogonal.
A spreadsheet.
Rows are number and columns are identified by letters. After Column Z, the next one is AA, then AB, then AC and so on. After AZ you have BA, BB, BC and so on.
false The vertical columns are known as groups whereas the horizontal rows are known as periods.
There are eight rows and eight columns .
10 rows and 80 columns
In Excel 97 there were 256 columns and 65536 rows.
There are 1,048,576 rows and 16,384 columns in Excel 2010
You count the rows and columns. "Dimensions" simply means how many rows and how many columns the matrix has.
There are 256 Columns and 65,536 Rows in Excel 2000.
Maximum sheet size is 1024 columns by 1048576 rows.
ummm.....columns or rows??
There are NO vertical ROWS, because rows run horizontally, and COLUMNS run vertically. There are 18 vertical columns in the periodic table.
Rows are horizontal and columns are vertical.
There is no answer to that as you can have as little or many as you want.
There is no answer to that as you can have as little or many as you want.