If you copy data from Excel and paste it into Word, then it will appear as a table in Word.
The word 'excel' appears 8 times in the King James version of the Bible.
Create from File
It depends on what you are trying to accomplish. You can hide a column, so it does not appear or you can format the cell contents to be white instead of black.
If you see a cell with a lot of has symbols in it, like #####, it usually means the cell is not wide enough to display its contents. This normally applies to numbers, not text. If you widen the column that the cell is in, it will display the contents correctly.
There is no automatic method for pasting data from Excel to Word.Open both Word and Excel.Go to Excel and highlight the cell range you want to paste to Word.Copy the range using the method you like.Go to Word and paste the contents at the location you want in Word.Clean up the location and formatting, as you like.
Excel and Word can be integrated. You can have some of the spreadsheet appear as a table in Word. If you set a link between them, then when Excel updates, so will the Word document. Word does have the facilities to do its own calcuations in tables, but they are limited and so Excel is better. So if you want the figures in a Word document and to keep them up to date as they change in the Excel document, then a link is the way to do it. You would copy the data you want in Excel, and then do a Paste Link in the Word document.
The formula bar.
The hash tags appear because the cells are not wide enough to show their contents. You just need to widen the cells to show the values.
Microsoft Word and Microsoft Excel documents can be linked to each other, so that changes in one document will show up in the other. So it is possible to enter data in Microsoft Word and have it appear in Microsoft Excel. It is also possible to do formulas in tables in Microsoft Word, without linking to Microsoft Excel.
Microsoft Office XP Small Business comes with Word, Excel, Outlook, and Publisher.
Yes.
When you copy a cell, you copy the contents of the cell. Excel allows you to paste those contents in a variety of ways. For example, you can paste either the cell contents (like a formula =A1+B3) or the cell value (like 143).