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No. By default, text is left aligned in Excel.No. By default, text is left aligned in Excel.No. By default, text is left aligned in Excel.No. By default, text is left aligned in Excel.No. By default, text is left aligned in Excel.No. By default, text is left aligned in Excel.No. By default, text is left aligned in Excel.No. By default, text is left aligned in Excel.No. By default, text is left aligned in Excel.No. By default, text is left aligned in Excel.No. By default, text is left aligned in Excel.
By default, text in Excel is left aligned.
The default format for text is left justified.
Default file format for Excel 2003: .xls Default file format for Excel 2007: .xlsx Note: You can't open lower version file format in upper version. If you want to do this then you will have to download the compatibility pack.
Right
general format
For text it would be left-aligned. Numbers, dates and times are normally right-aligned.
Answer: The default setting is no zeros are automatically added to the right of a decimal point. You need to set the format of the cell if you want a specific numbe of places to display to the right of the decimal point. Answer: In Excel, the default format is called "General".
Excel 2003 and earlier: .XLS Excel 2007 and later: .XLSX
It is standard practice to align text to the left in most applications, like in a word processor, so Excel follows that standard. Dates are a number format, so as with other numbers, such as percentages, decimals, times etc., they are aligned to the right.
As dates and times are numeric in nature, they are always aligned to the right in a cell by default.
All numbers in Excel are actually decimal values (stored at the lowest level). The default is a best guess of how you typed it. Dates, numbers, etc. Remember - The format doesn't mean much of anything.. what's stored there remains the same.