There is no such thing as a non-contiguous range. A range is a group of cells that are together in a rectangular block. Non-contiguous refers to cells that are not touching. So you can have more than one range which do not touch, so what you have are non-contiguous ranges. It is possible to select non-contiguous ranges by first selecting one range and then while holding the Ctrl key, select other ranges.
A contiguous range is a group of cells that touch each other forming a rectangular block of cells.
A group of cells that are all together in one block.
A range is a group of contiguous cells, meaning cells that are together. If you have two separate ranges beside each other, they could be described as contiguous ranges.
You may be referring to a contiguous range and a non-contiguous range.
a collection of multiple ranges that are not positioned in a contiguous cluster in an Excel worksheet
shift key
a collection of multiple ranges that are not positioned in a contiguous cluster in an Excel worksheet
Yes, a range is a contiguous block of cells.
They can be called a Range or a Block. This is only if it is a single selection of a rectangular block of cells. It is possible to select cells that are not together, known as being non-contiguous, but this is not a range or block.
A cell that touches another cell is a contiguous cell. A nearby cell that does not touch the cell in question, is a non-contiguous cell.
False. A range is a contiguous block of cells, not contagious.
I think you probably mean "range" instead of "ranch". In Excel, a range is a group of cells. A range can be as small as a single cell (for example, cell A1), block of cells (example, A1:B2), or even non-contiguous cell (example: A1,B2,C3). It could also be an entire column (A:A) or row (1:1). In the A1:B2 example above, this range would include four cells A1, A2, B1, and B2
The Rocky Mountains
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