Microscope
A microscope with a zoom of 100X, but if you want to see it good do 1000X.
when they want to see the inside of the cell.when you use a electron microscope the cell is going to die.
you can use a microscope if you want you can put the cell on a little clear plate then observe it it is optional
I do not want to get in a jail cell
Click in the cell you want to use.
to get them to look how you want them to look
A microscope.
cell protection
You could use the Undo to get rid of them one at a time, or just use the delete key to delete the cell values you want to get rid of.You could use the Undo to get rid of them one at a time, or just use the delete key to delete the cell values you want to get rid of.You could use the Undo to get rid of them one at a time, or just use the delete key to delete the cell values you want to get rid of.You could use the Undo to get rid of them one at a time, or just use the delete key to delete the cell values you want to get rid of.You could use the Undo to get rid of them one at a time, or just use the delete key to delete the cell values you want to get rid of.You could use the Undo to get rid of them one at a time, or just use the delete key to delete the cell values you want to get rid of.You could use the Undo to get rid of them one at a time, or just use the delete key to delete the cell values you want to get rid of.You could use the Undo to get rid of them one at a time, or just use the delete key to delete the cell values you want to get rid of.You could use the Undo to get rid of them one at a time, or just use the delete key to delete the cell values you want to get rid of.You could use the Undo to get rid of them one at a time, or just use the delete key to delete the cell values you want to get rid of.You could use the Undo to get rid of them one at a time, or just use the delete key to delete the cell values you want to get rid of.
To reference a cell relative to the one containing the formula, you can use relative cell references. For example, if the formula is in cell A1 and you want to reference the cell one column to the right, you can use B1. If you want to reference the cell one row down, you can use A2. This way, the reference adjusts based on the formula's location.
To identify a specific cell. For example, if you want to identify the cell at the intersection of column G and row 13, you would use the cell reference G13.
In Excel, if you want a cell to always equal a specifc cell, use "$" -- for example, if you want the current cell to always equal A2, even when inserting rows or columns, use the formula: =A$2$