You can merge more than one cell into one cell and then have it across more than one column. The text would still be centred in one cell, but it is a merged cell, so its text will be centred over a number of columns.
If it is a number that is in the cell that is not wide enough, Excel will fill the cell with # symbols. If it is text in the cell, either the text will only show what can fit in it if the next cell has something in it, or it will spill out across the neighbouring cells if they are empty, though the text will not actually be in those neighbouring cells.
Merging, or sometimes called Merge and Center, as content can be centered in the resulting cell. Note, however, that only the content in the first (top, left) cell will be retained using the standard Merge or Merge and Center features.
only the characters in the cell
only the characters in the cell
only the characters in the cell
At any one time you can only be working on one cell in Excel, like when you are typing data. Even if you have many cells selected, only one can actually be used. That cell is the active cell. All other cells are inactive. So an inactive cell is any cell that is not the active cell.
Cell protection only kicks in when you protect the entire sheet. So for the cell to be protected, then the sheet has to be protected.
No. The condition of a cell can be either true or false.
Backspace?
A cell can hold up to 32,767 characters, of which only 1024 can be seen in the cell.
There is only one ribbon in Excel. It has multiple tabs. The options for borders and shading are in the Font group on the Home tab.
The main difference between these unit cells lies in the positions of atoms within the cell. In a simple cubic unit cell, atoms are only present at the cell corners. In body-centered cubic, there is an additional atom at the center of the cell, and in face-centered cubic, there are atoms at the cell corners as well as at the center of each face.