The default alignment for text is left aligned. You can centre the text after it is entered. You can also set the formatting to be centred before entering anything. Then when text is typed into the cell it will be centred.
Yes. Text can be left, right, centred or justified.Yes. Text can be left, right, centred or justified.Yes. Text can be left, right, centred or justified.Yes. Text can be left, right, centred or justified.Yes. Text can be left, right, centred or justified.Yes. Text can be left, right, centred or justified.Yes. Text can be left, right, centred or justified.Yes. Text can be left, right, centred or justified.Yes. Text can be left, right, centred or justified.Yes. Text can be left, right, centred or justified.Yes. Text can be left, right, centred or justified.
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 the text editor does not have a centred text option you can add HTML code to achieve this: <div align = center> This is centred! </div> replacing This is centred! with your own text.
Not necessarily. Text aligns to the left, numbers and dates to the right and logical values (TRUE and FALSLE) are centred. So it depends on what you are entering.
By default, text in Excel is left aligned.
Left, centred and right.
Left, Right, Centred and Justified.
Excel does not create stylized text, but you can insert WordArt. You will find the WordArt option in Excel 2007 on the Insert tab in the Text section.
A DOS editor is not capable of reading a standard Excel file. An Excel file must be opened with Excel or some application that can read Excel files. Text editors are not capable of doing that. They are designed for working on things like text files.If you have a standard Excel file and save it as a text file, then text editors can open them. All that will be in that is pure text, and not things like formulas and calculations and formatting etc. When you are saving as a text file, save it with a txt extension and most text editors will be able to open it. How you specifically do it will depend on the particular text editor you are using.
text in a cell
There is no reason why you cannot type that in. As there are letters in it, it will be treated by Excel as text.
It is a spreadsheet, but not a text editor.