No, they are the opposite of each other. Split cells allows you to break a cell into several different cells and merge cells brings two or more cells together to make one cell.
The name is "merge and center", which combines all highlighted cells. For newer versions of Excel this is on the "Home" tab.
The Merge Cells option.
What you have is a situation where the correct wording - the one that you want to create - is already an alternate to anotherquestion.You will get a message something like this:"Others have said that '[your question]' is the same as [the question that it is an alternate of]. Is this correct?"Merge - Yes, and merge the original questionSplit - No, these are different questions.Since your wording is trapped inside that "wrong" question, you want to choose "Split." Now, the question you are working on will become an alternate to the correctly spelled version you were trying to create in the first place.
Select the cell (or cells) where you want to centre (uk english) the title, right click and select format>alignment and select centre under horizontal (or you can use the menu at the top by selecting format>cells to access the same options). If you have a group of cells (eg with a number of columns below them) and you want a word centred above all of them, type the word you want in the first cell on the left, then repeat the above process and make sure you tick the checkbox where it says "merge cells"
Before, those cells were a part of another cell, then the bigger cell split into many pieces, therefore the smaller cells are made from the same cell.
Splitting a cell means taking a cell that is a merged cell, and so would originally have consisted of more than one cell and returning the cell to being those cells. So it is reversing the process of merging cells.
Nope - merge and separate are opposites of each other.
Sex Cells. During the process of Meiosis, two cells, one with DNA from dad and another with mom, split into half at the same time. By the time they split, both cells have already copied the chromosomes. This results in 4 different cells or two different groups.
Yes, but you have to use the "split cell" command. Highlight the first cell of a row, right click and select "split cells", enter the number of colums and rows you want; then use F4 (repeat) to perform the same action on the rest of the cells in the row!
The daughter cells have the same # of chromosomes & the same amount of DNA
No! And they did not merge either.
If things are working correctly, yes a cell splits into two identical cells. When things are not working correctly the newly created cell is mutant and can be cancerous.